Klan Attorney Begins His Move to Discredit FBI Spy l-l'A VMrp'ifri I.. ‘ . I ■ ^ ^ HAYNEVILUfi, AlH. (AI , --A (leftinNO MlUjrnoy Nought UKtny h) [Mulrtty mi |<;|»| undmcovci Uian ttH II li^iililiuiiakor niul ii Kii Kliix KliiiiNiimii wlio'vloliitod » HWorii oiith agalnNl betraying NCcretH^ of the order. Step by step, attorney Matt H. Murphy Jr., general counsel for United Klans of Ameiica, luc„ dug into the background of (iary Thoiium Howe Jr., tho KHI Informer, In an attempt u> dla- crudi,t the upderi^over man’s leHtlmony. , Itflwe (^Nlifkul Tn^eNiluy (hNli KluiiNinan Collie Leroy \ViU kiiiN Jr., Zl, WON the killer of' a while clyU rights worker, Viola Gregg'LIuzzo of Detroit, after a march from Selma to Montgomery 's <‘ar on a lonely stretclr of U.S. IKI near l/)wndesl>oro. Driving the Klansinan's as, 4Z, of Bessemer. Sdated next to Thomas was William Orville Eaton, 41, also of Bessemer. Thomas and Eaton also are under murder indictment and nWaitlng trial I'jUton also opened fire With a ((.'onttnued on Page 2, Col. 3) The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition \'()L. I'J.T NO. 75 if ic ir 'k I’ON'I'lAr, INIIt'IIKJAN, WKI)NKS1)A\, 1NIA\' 5, UMi.'i 7ti rA(;i’,.S Yonk Paratroopers Land in Viet Nam SAIGON, South Viet Nam (A*)—An armada of transport planes landed 1,200 U.S. paratroopers in South Viet Nam today. They are the first American Army L'TOund combat units sent to fij^ht the Communist Viet Anothef 2,300 men of the 173rd Airborne Brigade 2 Committees OK War Funds were expected from Oki-n/iwa soon, probably this week. Half of flic 1,200 paratroopers were landed at the Bien Hon air base hS miles northeast of Sni- See Story, Page A-5 WASHINGTON (AP) - The House overwhelmingly backed up President Johnson’s Vief Nam and Dominican Republie policies today by sending to the Senate an emergency $7M-million defense appro()riation bill. gon. The rest came in at the Vung Tail airstrip on the South China sea 40 miles southeast of Saigon. U.S. Army forces already in Viet Nain pre here as advisers to the South Vietnamese forces and as training personnel. OAS Group Is Trying to Work Out Settlement Sniping at U.S. Troopsi Continued by Rebels; No New Casualties WASHINGTON (AP) - Appropriations committees of both the House and the Senate approved today President Johnson’s request for $700 million to finance the war in Viet Nam. House leaders promptly scheduled a vote on the money bill as the first" order of business after the House convenes at noon, (^uick passage was expected. In a brief report explaining Its speedy actloh, the House committee .said the additional money “will provide the means for continuing the buildup of modern supplies, ^ equipment and facilities for qur forces." It added that the bill will give Congress an opportunity "to make known to our friends and foes alike that .the people of the United States have every intention of standing firm in their opposition to Communist aggression." The committee noted that the President has authority to obtain 'the $700 million from - funds already available but said “prudence dictates the enactment of the proposed supplemental appropriation.” The paratroopers are expected to have the same assignment that the U.S. Marines now have at the Da Nang air base and Ph'u Bui, 350 miles north of Saigon — defense in depth of the key installation with a liberal sprinkling of offensive operations against the Viet Cong thrown in. Vung Tau may be destined to become a major buildup area for U.S. troops, similar to Da Nang. As the new arrivals took up position there, Vietnamese air force fighter-bombers were streaking down ,on suspected Viet Cong positions about five miles away, pouring cannon and rocket fire into the ground. Most of the troopers were too busy to notice, although the cannon shots were clearly audible. Patrolling from Da Nang, U.S. Marines killed eight Viet Cong, their largest toll so far. One Marine was wounded when he stepped on a booby trap or a mine. * FIGHTING FIRE WITH FOAM - Fire men in Perth Amboy, N.J.^ find themselves chin deep in foam after fighting a blaze in a lumber yard this morning, A special suds-producing machine was u.sed for the first time on the flames. .SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (/I*)- 3'lie peace commission of the Organization of American States hammered tot»ethei^ a final truce agreement today that was endorsed by both sides. Tlien llie commission ^et forth to try to reach a peace settlement, receiving a list of conditions from llie military junta and taking them into insurgent territory. Hebcls continued sniping at U.S. troops in the Dominican GM PLEDGE -- General M6lors’ Plant City committee has made a pledge of $50,000 to the Pontiac Young Women’s (.'hristian As.sociation's capital funds campaign. T. F. Weit-horn (left) chairman of the committee and plant manager of the Pontiac Fisher Body Division plant, made the pledge to Mrs. William Emerson, president of the local YWCA. YWCA Gets capital, but no new casualties were reported. To Go Under Point System Teen Drivers Face Crackdown A U S. spokesman said airborne troops last night blew up an armed trawler—a ship 350 feet long apparently loaded with ammunition. The trawler was hit by rifle and machine gun fire in the Ozama River and burst into flame and exploded. $50,000 Gift LANSING (IP) - The House cracked down on teenage drivers yesterday — after watering down a bill Monday that would have stiffened penalties for poor driving. In a busy session yesterday the House also passed a bill to limit railroad movements when they interfere with automobile traffic, and received a business activities tax bill that could prevent multiple taxation of firms doing business in several states. The House passed and gave immediate effect to two Senate bills that together bring drivers 17 years or younger under the point system. The two measures, introduced by Sen. Milton Zaagman, H-Grand Rapids, would require the filing of Probate Court findings with the Secretary of State and would make the teen-agers under Probate Court jurisdiction subject to the point system. decisions on two and referred three to the House Ways and Means Committee in addition to moving five measures into position for a final vote. The bills now go to Gov. George Romney for Action. ■ With a weather, eye on the calendar, the House went into its second extra-long session in two days. In a four-hour meeting, it passed 10 bihs, delayed The railroad bill, passed 73-25, makes it unlawful for a train or a scries of train movements to obstruct vehicle traffic for more than five minutes at a time. Passed were two bills to make the investment of legislative and State Police retirement funds subject to the same laws governing the investment of life insurance funds. Despite a cease-fire, U.S. Marines continued to enlarge the international zone for refugees. They moved up four blocks to take in the embassies of El Salvador, Guatemala and Ecuador. The rebels protested the movement of the Marines to the OAS t'ommission, saying they were opposed to taking in all the embassies, some lying within insurgent territory. The Pontiac Young Women’s Christian Association is $50,000 closer to a new home today. The YWCA fund drive to purchase the former Beaudette home at 269 W. Huron received a $50,000 pledge from the General Order Dr. Sam Back to Prison A U.S. spokesman said, however, the cease-fire agreement was betvveen the rebels and the Dominican military junta that CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) -Dr. Sam Sheppard was ordered back to prison today to resume ttieJife sentence for the slaying of his wife, a sentence interrupted temporarily by a federal judge who ruled he had been unfairly tried. Motors’ Plant City Committee yesterday. The pledge boosted total contributions and pledges to date to “well over $100,000," according to Alice D. Sewfell, general chairman df the campaign committee and Mrs. William Emerson, YWCA president. * , The pledge, representing one-third of the $150,000 campaign goal, was made by T. F. Weitborn, chairman of the GM city committee and general manager of the Pontiac Flshr See Stories, Page A-8 In Today's 'Big Sweep' to Launch-City CleanupDrive Press Dream Realized iii New Pontiac school ad- "il A ministration building i C ready — PAGE B-8. Soviet Ads Russians try Madison Avenue techniques to push k goods - PAGE A-15. City Commissioners, merchants and other pivic leaders will kick off Pontiac’s cleanup campaign Saturday with “the big sweep." The community leaders will gather at 9 a.m. at Huron and Saginaw for a street cleaning session with brobms and Department of Public Works equipment. Mayor William H,, Taylor Jr will leadihf sweepers. Cole Porter Up to 100 unpublished ’ songs found in composer’s ' I files - PAGE A-19. Area News ...... ~ Astrology Bridge , Crossword Puzzle Comics ........ ^ Editorials . .. i Food Section Markets ... Obitnaries Sports Theaters .. . TV-Radio Programs C-19 Wilsonl Earl C-19 Women’s Pgs. B-l$—B-17 Cr9 ! C-12 i C-12 i C-19 i ... C-12 . . A-6 B-2-B-5 C-18 C-11 C-Z-CS C-18 • Taylor n«i^ proclaimed the month of May as “Make and Keep Pontiac Beautiful” month. Copies of the proclamation were presented to Joann Van-Tassel, cleanup committee chairman, and Aleck Gapsalis, Civic Improvement Advisory Committee chairman. The CIAC is coordinating the city wide cleanup drive. I GApsalis said it is hoped that cleanup efforts will be a 365-day proposition. Little Big Chief KEPOBE (Keep Pontiac Beautiful), a cardboard Garicature, has been selected as Pontiac’s cleanup symbol. Rain, Sunshine Will Alternate Next Few Days took over after the ciyilian junta was kicked out by the insurgents April 24. He said the agreement did not prohibit movement of U.S. forces. Sunshine and showers is the forecast for the Pontiac area for the next five days. Temperatures will soar into the 70s until the weekend, then turn a little cooler. Lows for , the peripd will register in the 50s. Occasional sliowers or thundershowers, totaling about one inch, may be expected tonight, tomorrow and Friday. Forty-eight was the low temperature in downtown Ppntiac preceding 8 a.m. By 2 p.m. the reading was 65. OAS Commission Chairman Ricardo M. Colombo of Argentina told reporters the truce agreement as finally put together covered these points: —Safe conduct for all political refugees in forfeign embassies. —Evacuation of all refugees (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) ■The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of ^ Plant. Appeals agreed with the judge Fisher Body Plant, who freed Sheppard that public- The General Motors gift will ity about hi? trial "was not of add impetus to the . campaign a rlhture calculated to inspire and bring in niany other pledges confidence in the objectivity and cash contributions from po-and gopd taste of the public tential donors according to cam-news media." . paign committee members. But it held there was no ★ ★ ★ constitutional basis for over- The campaign committee con-turning the conviction; sists of Mayor and Mrs. William Sheppard’s lawyer, F. Lee H.TaylorJr.,honorarycochair-Bailey of Boston, has 20 days in Mrs. Robert A. Arm- which to appeal this ruling. strong, Mrs. Joseph L. Bennett, He said today he would fight Mrs. Myron Buck, Mrs. Charles “direct to the U.S. Supreme Coppersmith, Mrs. Harold A> Court” if necessary. Fitzgerald, Mrs. Paul Gorman, “We are satisfied still that the Bruce‘ Hubbard, Mrs. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Pick Acting Head for Highway Chief . Hqrriman In Brazil to Discuss U. S. Action ‘KEpOBE’—It isn’t^Latin or Greek, but short for Keep Pontfac Beautiful. Cleanup Committee Chairman Joann Van-Tassdl and Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. sit in the presence of Little.Big Chief.tKI^POBE, Pontiac’s cleanup symbol. Last night the^mayor procIaimetHhe month-t)TMa)nas "Make and. Keep Pontiac-BeauntuT'month. , * BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) —U.S. special envoy W.. Avereil Harriman arrived here from Brazil today on his .Latin-American tour > to explain U.S., action in the Dominican Republic. ' , Argentina’s political parties almost unanimously oppose the U.S, intervention in the Dominican Republic. Labor and student groups have denounced the landing of U.S. troops in and around SSnto Domingo. * I^ANSING (AP), - 'The State Highway Commission yesterday named Acting Director Howard Hill to the $25,0(j0-a-year-post as managing director of the State Highway Department; The f 0 u r - m a n bipartisan commission announced the appointment was by a unanimous vote following an- hour-long session with Gov. George Romney. The commission was created by the new constitution to replace the former system of a department headed by an elected commissioner. John Mackie, now a U.S. congressman, was Michigan’s and the nation’s , last elected highway commissioner. James Nye, Harcourt Patterson, Mrs. Gelston V. Poole, Mr. and Mrk H. H. Smith, Irving Stem-man and Charles Harmon, treasurer. PROPERTY OPTION The Y’s option off the property is due to Expire June 1st. “General Motors’ generous pledge will make it possible td purchase ’he property at The price of $125,000," said Miss Ser-relk ' The extra $25,000 included in the goal, she explained, is for the copstruction and adequate lighting of an urgently n^ed parking lot, and additidh of a fire escape to the main building. ____needed are alterations to the three-car garage, to convert 1 it to nursery quarters, and fur- I nishings. HOWARD HILL Other Omtiibutions in amount- i (Continued"oTPage 2, Ctol. 4) ~ ■I'k ■y '• L Spy's Past Target of Attorney I IIK l‘()N'nAf: PHKSS. \yiy)NKSOAY, >IAY A. OAS Readies ((^onlituicd I'rom l‘u|j)‘ One) Zi; niliiMT plslol, Itowi- tifild. Hul II Millie IoxIcoIoIjImI, Dr. I'liiil Sholfclll, who mnovcd Ihe doiiitt hulloi irom llic vIcIIih'm hniln, hiid It'MlIliod ll wiis ii IlH* (•idihci mIiik which killed her. Uowe Niiid lie liiirt heen ii |iuid imdereiiver iii^eii. lor the riU lor live yeiirs. I HANI’IS (;AKY I'OWKHS lUiDoi.rii Aiu'.i. 'U2 Pilot Got Secret Decoration' NKW YOHK (AIM The Ceii-lrn| InlelliKcnce Agency *ln a secrel ceremony has nwardi'd a medal |o hVancis (Jary Powers, the U2 pilot whose crash deep inside the Soviet Union "shook the world - and caused a good deal of anguish to the CIA," the New York Herald Trihune said today. Red TV Tells of Spy'Hero' He and his colleagues liisi noticed Mis 1,|ii//.o and her Negi'o com|)anion. he siiid, while ^ wailing at a Irallic light in Set ma and tollowed llu'ir car lor some 2f) nnh's helore finally overtaking It - Pact for Truce (Continued From Page One) of other nations wishing to leave the country. ' Birmingham Area News Sojourn in Scandinavia Last in Travelogue Series I rurtMINOIIAM A Hcandipa- - The dlsIrlhMlIoii of foial |„ |''tan Bojourn will Im featured In all fact ions, The ngreement WHS nti-iioiinceil after a lliiiil eoiiler-eiice early hi (he day with the inllilary ]iinta. The advance („ the Marines, which was five hliH'ks wide as well as lour blocks deep, cni off some rehel lerriloiy in (he northern part rif the city This hronght a rebel protest. the Reason’s Iasi travelogue ill the Communlly Hou8« h’rlday and Saturday. PoriN of call for the viMual Journey will he in Norway, Sweden and Denmark. MOSCOW (DPI) - 'Ihe leller to the Soviet government news paper Pravda .said, "Thank you, for the return of i)ur husband and father" It was signed, "Mrs, H, Abel and daughter" The letter appeared in Febrn ary 19(i2 and probably mystified Soviet renders. It carried no mention of Mr K. Abel, who he was, what he did or why his wife and daughter were gratidul tor his "safe return." A Washington dispatch noted that the cra.sh five years ago last Saturday "chilled Fast-West relations and ended any meaningful contact between President Fisenhower and then Soviet Premier Khrushchev." On Moscow television yesterday, Itussians learned publicly tor (he first time that K. Abel was Col. Rudolph Abel, a Soviet masterspy. At the traffic light, llie wit ness .said, Wilkins looked at the automobile parked alongside and remarked, "l,ook there, baby brother I’ll he damned ’ Then, Kowc conlinned, "C.ene Thoma.s spoke n|i and .kaid, ‘Uel’s gel ’em” SOMFTHINt; INTFRVFNFD They tried several limes to pull alongside Mrs. l.iu/./o's car, itowe went on, but each time something intervened. Once they spotted a highway patrol car. Another time II was a crowd ol Negroes standing near (he highway, .ater, it was oncoming trat- MAKlNt; SPLASH IN SOCIETY 11 looks as if someone turned the faucet on Ohio State University President Novice (i. Fawcett Actually the school chief is getting into the swim by being inilialerl into Bucket and Dipper Honorary Society. (’ol Francisco (;aamano Deno, niilitary leader of the j revolt, charged that the United Slates had violated the demar- 'I'o be shown at 8 ludh nights, the film will be narrated by Arthur Dewey. ".Scandinavia" pot otdy is an all-color film, but it has background music in stereophonic sound. cation line establifjhed with the cease-fire agreement reached several days ago. He said a mnssa(‘re might re,sult. EXPRE.SSED CONCERN Viewers will see Norway with Its colorful I^aplandcrs and salmon fishing, fjords at apple blossom time, Norwegian han- After Long Flood Mississippi Is Receding fic. The story al.so noted that the summit meeting in Paris collapsed in the wake of the UZ uproar. Eisenhower said at the Paris conference that photo reconnaissance flights over the .Soviet Union had heen stopped and would not be resume^. Rut Khrushchev stormed out of the meeting. The copyright story also said -in part: Powers, who ostensibly was a lest pilot for the Lockheed Aircraft Corp., manufacturer of the U2, received the medal in a ceremony about two week.s ago at the CIA’.s headquarters in Langley, Va. He actually had been a $|0,000-a year pilot for the CIA. MUST BE SECRET Powers, now :f5, is not supposed to wear the medal and is not suppo.sed to tell anybody about it. , There were at least two mysteries surrounding' the medal: first, why the CIA wanted to bestow an award on its most famous employe — one who brought the agency under the public scrutiny which it always tries to avoid; second, why the CIA waited five years. Television commentator .Sergei Smirnov di.'udosed that Abel was honor(*d by the government after his exchange in l!Mi2 by a "foreign power" for American U2 pilot Francis Cary Powers. It was revealed that Abel was responsible for providing Soviet inlelligence with reports on the impending Nazi attack in 1!I4I. Abel join e d the Communist party in I'JIll after serving in the Ru.ssian secret service from 1927. The only thing Soviet viewers were not told ye.sterday was that the "foreign power" was the United Stales, which arrested Abel in Brooklyn on June 21, 1957, and charged him with heading a Soviet spy ring which for It years Iran.smitted military and atomic energy secrets to Moscow. The witness said he tried .several limes 1o get his companions to turn back to .Selma but that Thomas insisted, "We’re going to take ’em. We’re not going to give up ’■ I HANNIBAL, Mo (DPI) 'Ihe Mi.ssissippi River flood was on the wane today at the end of a month-long sweep of record crests that left 16 persons dead When Ihe lime came, Howe continued, “Gene Thomas got out his pistol and handed it to Wilkins, As we got directly even with the car, Wilkins .said, 'Give it some ga.s'’, We speeded iij) a little bit. YWCA Gets Building Gift of $50,000 (Continued From Page One) ‘LOOKED AT US’ “\Vilkhis held his arm out the window, elbow length. Just as he got even with the front window of the other car, the lady turned and looked directly at us. As she l(M)ked, Wilkins fired two .shots. "1'homa.s laid, ‘Men,shoot the hell out of them’.” of $.'■)() or more no^ previously listed include the following; ir»t Federal Savings & Loan Association of Oakland UiS Mary Nephler \r. and Mrs. C. S. Swayze and drove 40,000 persons from their homes in five Midwestern states. Danger spots still existed where the swollen river pushed againkt patchwork dikes. Levees across the river from here were being patrolled around the clock, Rut civil defense officials and other authorities said (he buttle against the worst flooding in the region's history was all but over. OAJi officials expressed concern over the situation, and the | peace mission hastily arranged the 20-mlle trip to Ihe .San Isidro air base to discuss the situation with the junta. A U..S, spokesman announced earlier that the Ma- (Continued From Page One) rlnes had extended (heir lines without opp«.sition after both >«’ <•./.( Dr .Shep the Junta and the rebel lead- ' Court Orders Dr. Sheppard Back to Jail become ers agreed to the move. Sporadic 8h{M)tlng occurred In Santo Domingo again last night after one of the quietest days since the revolt began 11 days , ago. No U S. casualtie.s were reported. freedom permanent," he said. Sheppard will not go back to prison until (he court’s order has been served on him. It was uncertain Just when that would be. As the mighty river rolled downstream f r o m Hannibal, weather bureau experts .said it would stay well below BckkI stage and lose its destructive punch. Upstream, In scores mf beleaguered cities and towns, the cleanup work was already going full steam. For Sheppard, the decision * * * eiKled months of uticertainty, U S. paratroops controlling He and the former Ariane the Duarte Bridge, over the, Tebbenjohanns, Ihe IlS-ycar-old Ozama River, sank a rebel mo- I blomle he married soon after his torboat that had been plying the J release from prison last Abel, (hen 55 and balding, had been operating from a photographers studio in the shadow of the Brooklyn Federal Courthouse. On Nov. 15, 1957, after a trial in which he did not testify, Abel was sen-• tenced in the same courthouse to 30 years in prison. He was defended by attorney James Donovan of New York, who later was to serve as go-between in the release of the Cuban Bay of Pigs prisoners and now heads the New York School Board. Uowe said he also had a pistol but did not fire it. As they pulled ahead, Uowe said he noticed Mrs. l.iuzzo’s car .still traveling in a straight line and told his colleagues it seemed the shots may have missed. But, he added, “Wilkins spoke up and said, ‘Baby brother, I don’t miss. That so-and-so is deader than hell’.’’ J RIVER CRESTS 11 The river crested at Hannibal ■ and Quincy, 111., yesterday, held 1 steady for several hours, and I then started its slow decline. I A 24-hour river watch was I; still in effect at Warsaw and I Niota, III., Pike County, III., II and ot(ier spots along the Illi-I nois side. river sniping at them. REBEL BOAT . have lived quietly in sub-j urban Cleveland awaiting the Another, rebel boaj entered the port last night and opened fire on U.S. forces on the river bank. When the Americans returned the fire, the trawler blacked out and appeared to be adrift, a U S. military spokesman said. deci.'i After returning to Be.ssemer later in the night, R()we said they went to a place known as Lorene’s and, after talking with I a woman inside, Thomas assured the other men, ’Tve got us an alibi.” I The Army Corps of Engineers I warned residents of flooded I towns not to pump water out of i basements tw) quickly becau.se j ground water pressure could collapse the walls. Nallonol Sorority The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly sunny with showers and tbundershoiyers by afternoon continuing tonight. Continued cool today. Highs 58 to 66 except near Lake Huron. Not so cold tonight, lows 48 to 56. Thursday variable cloudiness yvith .scattered thundershowers and warmer, highs 70 to 78. iEast to northeast winds 8 to 14 miles this afternoon shifting to south to southwest 10 to 18 miles Thursday. Friday outlook scattered thundershowers and warm. At S «.m.: Wind Velocity I Direction: Northeast Sun sels Wednesday at 7:37 p.n Sun rises Thursday at S:23 a.n Moon sets Thursday »t 12:38 a Moon rises Thursday at »:42 a.n Downtown Tamperaturos Tuesday's Temperature Escanaba . 54 38 Gr. Rapids 83 44 Houghton 52 33 cansing 64 45 Marquette 50 39 t’ellston 56 24 Traverse C. 59 30 Atbuquerque 75 40 62 i Atlanta 81 54 46 Bisfnarck 81 60 54 I Boston «2 4« Jacksonville S6 : Kansas. City 88 i Ids Angeles 69 ; Miami Beach 78 : LEONARD T. LEWIS 3 Teens Die in Crash UNIONVILLE (AP (-Marilyn Johnson, 14, and James Tatu, 18, both of Caro, were killed today when their auto hit a bridge near Unionville in Tuscola County. Deputies said Miss Johnson, the driver, apparently fell asleep attpUjn^heel. "All the levees are holding. We think we're going to be all right,” a sheriff’s officer said today at Pittsfield, III. At Handock County, a flood worker said, “Things look just fine.” Civil Defense Director William Broaddus said at Hannibal that the Mississippi was continuing to recede, with only about 23 families still out of their homes. “Elverythng is in good shape,” he said. “Our big prpblem now is the cleanup.” The five-nation OAS mission reported yesterday that the opposing Dominican factions were agreini on major peace plans. The committee said it was awaiting formalization of points accepted by both sides, including “confirmation of the cea.se-fire, demarcation and enlargement of the (international) security zone to include all embassies, evacuation of refugees and distribution of food, medicine and medical equipment to all sectors of the,population.” The mission recommended that the American republics which "are in a position to do so establish a combined inter-American military force under the Organization of American States” to help restore normal- cy. OAS APPROVAL The United States has been trying to get OAS approval for military contributions by the various republics to help restore peace. GOT THE WORD He can apply for parole immediately after—and if-he goes back to pri.son. .Sheppard and his German-born wife got the word at their house in Rocky River. He r^ ferrod all questions to his lawyer. .Siicppard spent his freedom reading medical journals, hoping to resume the osteopathic practice halted by his conviction in the July 1954, slaying of his pregnant wife, Marilyn, in their suburban Bay Village home. He contended a "bushy-haired" intruder .beat her to death. U S. Dist. Judge Carl Weinman ordered Sheppard relcajied on grounds unfair publicity had violated his rights to a fair trial. He was convicted Dec. 21, 1954, of second-degree murder after a trial which attracted j worldwide attention,- The appeals court opinion, while also objecting to some of the publicity, said (t was not ‘‘of a nature calculated to create lasting opinions as to Dr. Sheppard’s guilt.’’ It said Judge Weinman had gone “beyond permissible linjife to find constitutional fault in _what was done by the Ohio courts.” dierafts and (h« sjieclaciilar midnight mni. tmiEH .scenes Dewey •pliolognililted the gar-dens of GotlieniMU’g, Sweden: Vlsby, Ihe clly of' ruins and roses; .Swedish Induatry; and Swedish leeimgers at a dnnCe. The Denmark portion of the film Includes Nliuts of Goprn-liugea, Ihe Royal Bullet and V Hie niiikliig of Danish puBlry. A prcfllrn Srnorgnsbord will lie served from (i p m. both plglils. Dinner re.servations are required hy tomorrow, but tick ets lor llic film can be purchased at the r. “Water Wasted Wealth" l.s the title of tanlglit’s Birmingham - Bloomfield League of Women Voler.s program at tlie Baldwin I’uhllc Library. William I). Marks of (he ' Michigan Water Resources Commlsslun wtH be the featured speaker At (he 8 p.in. event. Marks will give an illustrated talk on "Michigan's Water Problem.s" Also on the |)rogram will be a film shown by the league, which will provide a display and publications on the subject. The program Is open to the public. BL(X)MF1ELD TOWN.SHIP 'Hie annual dinner meeting of the Oakland (Jtizens League will be held May 18 al Devon Gables rcslmirant, I.ong Lake and Telegraph. Gue.st speaker at the 6 p.m, program will be Lawrence M. Carino, 1176 Covington, v 1 c e pre.sident of the Slorer Broadcasting Co. and general manager of WJBK-TV. The 500 member league is a non-partisan, non-profit organization. Its purpo.se is to establish and promote better understanding of civic issues, iCickct information can be obtained by contacting the Birmingham Community Hou.se. Denies Remark Aimed at JFK Johnson Reference to JRocking Choir Cited Sfudenf on Trail of 'Talking' Guinea Pigs Officers Elected by Library Group Elected president „al last night’s meeting of the Friends of the Kresge Library of Oakland University was Leonard T. Lewis of 1450 Pilgrim, Blbom-field Township. * Other officers selected were James L. HowJett,, of 104 E. Iroquois, vice president; and Mrs. W-. Edwin Mosher Jr.^ of 279 N. Glengarry, Bloomfield. Tow n-. ship, secretary-treasurer. Outgoing president was Carl F. Ingraham of 940 Harmon, Birmingham. WEATHER—Scattered’showers and thunder-, showers fibrecast tonight from the southern Plains through , file Great,‘^LaKes abd into the Appalachians. Showers are expected, the Rockies to. the Dakotas. It will be cooler jttlB aouthbrn Plains and Great Basin to the upper Mis- > agrtYi^y aM bfarnjer in, the upper Lakes and mid-Mis- f Red Military Readying Big Moscow Display MOSCOW ((Pi — Soviet armed forces are rehearsing what is expected to be the- biggest display of military Jiardware ever seen in Mosco^. ■r- I . ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) Johnny Scoville is certain his guinea pigs are talking to each other. He is determined to convince the judges of this at the National Science Fair here this week. Scoville, 17, the soh of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Scoville of Evarls, Ky., is a high school senior. After 18 months of experiments he says he has isolated 11 different words or sounds' — his guinea pigs make to each other. The youth is one of more than 400 students from the United States and sevferal other countries competing in the science fair. AH winners of state, regional or national fairs. MANY HOURS Scoville has spent hundreds of hours listening to the sounds of his guinea pigs: He also . has experimented with bees and dogs. He says he believes most animals communicate with each other. His tape recordings demonstrate different guinea pig sounds for hunger, mating, anger, : contentment, and even thanks. “They have two kinds of ‘thank you’ sounds," Scoville said. "One is thanks for food and the other is thanks for attention — like being petted.” OTHER CALLS Other sounds include one made by'the mother guinea . „ just before birth, and.one nto^e ^ .1 by the mother when she calls her young to nurse. "The important thing is that all these sounds comd before the action,” he said. “For instance, 1 know when they are going to fight, because they argue with each other.” The fighting sound is guttural,; accompanied by gnashing of teeth. The anger sound is not quite so guttural, and is not accompanied by gnashing. The hungry sound is squeaky. Scoville further illustrates his theory through use of an oscilloscope which displays the dif- ferent guinea pig sounds in light waves. When Scoville plays the mating call on his tape, there is pandemonium in the guinea pig cages. When he plays the mother’s call, the young hurry to the mother. CAN HE TALK?—Johnny Scoville, 17, of Evarts, Ky., shows one frf his guinea pigs to Japanese students who are also competing in The Intomational Science Fair at-St. Louis. Scoville says research shows that guinea pigs talk to each sounds. He has sounds-mean: t others. other through a system of figured out what ll of their ma working on several NEW YORK ((P - George E. Reedy, White House press "secretary, has denied a charge that President Johnson’s di.savowal of a "rocking chair” approach to Communist aggression implied criticism of the late President John F. Kennedy. Kennedy, who suffered from a back ailment, often was photographed in a rocking chair. Johnson also likes a rocking chair and invariably rocks and talks while visitors sit on a sofa. Rep. Gerald R. Ford, R-Mich., the House minority^ leader, in New York for a* fund-raising dinner yesterday, said a statement by Johnson was an implied criticism of the (allure of the Bay of Pigs invasion by Cuban exiles. The invasion was an attempt lo unseat Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro early in the Kennedy administratiem. In an address to a labor conference in Washington Monday, Johnson had said: / “We don’t propose to sit here in our rocking chair with our hands folded and let the Communists set up any government in the Western Hemisphere.” UNDERSTAND INNUENDO Ford told newsmen: “We all understand the innuendo of that statement. It implied criticism of our failure at the Bay of Pigs, which all of us know was a failure.” “Of course not,” was Reedy’s reply sin Washington when he was asked if the rocking chair remarks; implied criticism of Kennedy or the failure of the Invasion. \ / Ford said he supported tlw Johnson administration’s actions in Viet Nam and the Dominican Republic. COULD DEVELOP He added, however, that unless the export of communisfn by Castro is halted and thn|(®v-ernment of the Dominican Re-pablic is stabilized, Communist uprisings could develop in possibly in three other Latin American cffl^tries in the next six months. -|r •I , Tin<: PONTIAC FiiKSS, Wednesday, MAY 5, m\n At«-8 House OKs Birth Control Bills l,ANSIN(i (Al») A pair of OIH'O ( 0nlr6verslal biiih control bllla breezed tbrouKb the House Tuesday. Sent to the Senate were bills si«»nsored by Uep. William Ityan, D-Detroit, wlilch estab-HhIi a state polury on birth control, vlinl(!s and assistance to recipients of welfare and aid to deiMimlent children and this nuHilcally Indigent. The bills, passed 92-13 and 98-f», were the result of agreements worked out Ixdween llyan ami Uep. H. James Starr, D-han-slng, a former H(sdal worker. The amendments provide for verbal nutiflcntion of all wel- fare rm'tpients, Including unwed niothers. ’riie amendments quieted controversy and drew praise and support from former opponents, including leglslatcirs and at least one planned parent IukhI group. The bills, If approved by tbe Senate and signed Into law by (lOV. (ieorge Homney, would replace |K>ll(des adoptisl by the state ScK'lal Welfare Commission and tbe Detroit Welfare Boat'd earll«!r this year and the Kent county welfare agency last StemlMU'. The commission’s Detroit is)-liclcs permit case workers vislt-‘na the homes of recipients visit biltlate dlac|yt to^^^ Value to 69‘ Cotton Fabrics Yardgoods j^|00 Prints solids, patterns, designs all in 100% chiton. 1 to 10 yard remnants. Perfect for those summer clothes. ~ Basement Girls Shoes jOO $3.95 Many itylm In oxfordi and ilrapt by 6ndlcott.John5on to choosa from. SIzoa 8Vi to 2. — Batumunt Foam Rubber Bed Pillows Simm$ Price 67 17x22" Nbn-Allergonic, shredded foam rubber in colorful floral licking. _ Baiamunt Summer Short Sleeve Boys’ Pajamas Simmn Price 100 Short sleeve pullover style with elastic waistband pants. Sizes 4 lo 10. Short or long legs — Basamunt 100% Cotton Boys’ Sport Shirts 79' en’s Knit Shirts with ^Action Sleeves’ First Quality |00 Be prepared for summer weather with‘'these knit sport shirts with action sfretch underarms ribbed collar and cuffs and breastpocket. Mostly white. Sizes S'M-L. ; —Basement Mens Short Sleeve Sport Shirt Sinims U Price I Full or Twin Sizes Bedspreads 186 $14.95 U Slight irregulars of belter spreods. ■ Severcil styles and colors, to choose f'’oni. — Baiement Ladies Size 8 to 18 Stretch Pants $7,9,T ^97 Value 'Ladies 60% rayon—40% nylon stretch pants with bgof strops and side—Zipper. Pink, blue, block,' grey, brown. —Moin Floor. Comfortable I Panty Briefs Ladies Panties Simms Price 4f1"' Soft EiderJon acetate panties , in white or pastel colors. Sizes imoll to ex-large. — Main Floor Mother^s Day and Graduation Gift 20% Discount Off All sYTimex’ Watches $n.9S Timax Watch . 8.86 $15.86 Tltntx Self-Wind . 12.76 $12.95 Timex Watch . 10.36 $16.95 Timex Self-Wind . 13.56 $14.96 Timax Watch . 11.96 $19.95 Lediae 21 Jewel.. 15.96 $16.00 Timex Watch . 12.00 $24,55 Man’i 21 Jewels . 19.96 $39.95 Timax Electric Watch..........................$31.96 Fully guaranteed 'Timex' watches in newest Styles for men, women and the youngsters. Perfect 9'hs or for your personal use. All prices plus 10% Fed. Tax. —Main Floor General Electric Gift Clocks Two styles lo choose fromi GE 'Clearlux beoulitul clear plastic mantel style, or GE 'Provincial' witli fruilwood finish. Plus 10% fed. Tax. —Main Floor Ladies Leather Clutch Purse 095 Simms ^ ^ ^ Price ■: Leather chxch purse hoi roomy ;i bill comportment, 2 coin purses, .• In red gold block or while.; 10% led. tax. --Main Floor Ladies Gift Billfolds 32 Picture Windows cowhicj|!. In red, gold Ingraham Folding Style Travel Alarm 069 $5.95 Value ' Famous Ingraham brond travel X clock in a folding cose. In white, ;I; red or grey. Factory guarantee, >; 10% fed. lax. — Moin Floor ;• Westclox Folding Style Travel Clock S7.M It®® Faille ^ Attractive hi-impacf plastic case with sliding front. Luminous dial. 10% Fed. Tax. — Main Floor . 100% Acetate-Fancy Lace Trims Ladies L^n^h Gowns Simms Price |57 Lovely vyaltz lengths gowns in pastel shades, some with short sleeves or coo sleeves. some with short sleeves or cap sleeves. SizesLto XL. —Main Floor Kodak ('.omeros Moke Perfect Gifts 8mm SAVER Movie Camera With Roll of Color Film You'll he dll ready lo loke benulifiil movies on Mother's Day with this Kodak enmem and color (iltn. F2.7 cooled lens willi rapid wind crank dial sellings lor perleci exposures. Main Floor Kodak Instamatic 100 Set Ueg. $17.9^ Vohu* 1298 So easy lo use with Instant pack loading, bujit-in flash keep it handy for those irresislable pictures of the children —Main Floor Perfect QiftFor Moiher*s Day ‘Dominion’ Electric As shown — has tkh weight up front for bettor carving of roasts, poultry hams, cake, fruit cheese etc. Stainless steel blades. Free replacement guarantee. — 2nd Floor 17“ Dormeyer Elactrio Portable Mixer »■777 Price m 3-3p«ad portubi* hand mixer for any kltchan mixing choru. With cord. —2nd Floor White or Colors Kleenex 7issues • 1C 39c Valuta 29 300 double or 600 singl# slieeU of loll but strong Klaanex. — Main Floor Twin Pack 2-Tubes Tooth Paste 43* $1.06 Value Your choica of lodel^ Kolynos or Llilnrln* toothpaste In twin-pack. —Main Floor Pack of 12 Famous Sanitary Napkins 29« Reg. 45c Your choice of Kolex, Ferns, , Slenderline or Miss 5eb. for feminine hygiene. —Main Floor Automatic 4*10 Cup Coffee Makers Gift Price ||99 'Universal' automatic percolator larfect coffee and keeps It serving warm at the table. —2nd Floor Cfllncenfrated Tube Prell Bhampoo 89' $1.39 ODC Family ^ Size Genuine Prell shampoo for lustrous hair. In a tube, handy tor travel. —Main Floor 2<-Types of liistre Cream’ Hair Sprays $1.25 value, 18Vi ounce Lustre Creme for regular or hord to hold hair. Brushes out, is not sticky. . —Main Floor 59’ Polished Cotton-Men’s White Pants “tir 100 Polished cotton pants tor men restouronts.i bakeries hospitals t Fully sanforized, ^ zipper fly. Size 36-40-42. -B Irregulars Ladies Knit Toppers 59 Famous C ISante ■ Brand Assorted' prints, solids, V necks and round necks, many colors to choose from.'—Main Floor Jumbo Brass Case H” Lipstick Your Choice 19 Try 0 new shade of li^tlck for spring 4 alluring red shades to choose from. —Main Floor Importefl^ Mteliaii’ Talcum Powder 10 ounce imported talcum powder, by Maries or Djerkiss —Main Floor Famous ’Kranks Shave Bomb 14 Ounce 49' $1.10 value regular or menthol lather shave bomb for o comfortable shove. ‘Woodbury’ Bubbling Bath Oil $1.00 talue 33 12 ounce bubbling bath oil In , 'Lilac Bouquet' Irogrance. —Main Floor Automatic Electric Can Opener Gift "V99 Price ■ Opens any size ond shape can . . . fc efficient electric opener mokes on Ideal ( lor Mollier. Guaranteed 'Regent'. -2nd FIc 12” Stainless Steel Chicken Fryer $12.95 88 Value Easy to core for stainless fry pan with hi-dome cover for largest chickens. —2nd Floor' ‘REVERE Copper Clad Tea Kettle^ 5.75 067 Value Stainless with copper-clad bottom for fast even heat. Trigger action spout. #2701. -2nd Floor GifTFor Mother or Your Own Use ‘Presto’ Pressure Cooker 6^uart-$19,98 Value Largo 6-quart pressure cooker for better; faster cooking of oil foods. Exclusive pressure regulator. Cast'oluminum cooker by'Presto'.—2nd Floor All Metal Hi-Lo Cake Saver $2.98 Value 99' 10-inch diameter, 5'/z' high for largest cakes. Retains freshness, Gold speckle. Solid gold color. —2nd Floor 16*Pc. Starter Set Dinnerware 9.95 Value I 199 Ceramic dinner wares set has dinner plates, cups and saucers Blue Interior. -^2nd Floor Our Notion's BlUerly^S TIIK VONTIAC IMIKSS, \VKI(NKSI)AV. MAY 5. lUM Millions Still Live on Poverty's Brink (EDITOR'S NOTE ~ Other tu^mneed nationx started concerning themselves unth the plight 0/ their impoverished old jHiople long hejore ^ the United Slates did. Tmtag. more than million Amerienri fsimilirs are headed hg a per son over tIA trying to make do on incomes helow the jHiveiiy level. Congress Is rushing to their aid. I IJy IIAIUIY I KHCillSON WASHINCTON, (Ul’l) There •are at least nine tederal aK(-n cies woi kintt to impiove the lot of old jMJople^ V 1'lie 4S(K-ial/K-proaching $20. • Fach year one out of every six older persons goes to a iiospital. Fach average elderly couple pays close to $600 a year in hospital bills. Opponeiits of the medicare bill now being dehate.slng Is al-1 most s(»melhlng for everybrnly.; lake this: • Maximum inimthly social security benefits for a per.son would rise from $127 to $135 Monthly maximums for a lam Hy would go up iKim $2.54 lo $:il2 and afler Itl/l to .$;tii||. • ('hildrei\ ol deceased, re fired or dis.ahh'd p.irenls would draw benefits until age 22 instead of HI H they wer(' full time .students • .Sell employed doctors iind interns would la* brought under social secuiity. ’ • Social .security recipients | could earn up lo ^400 a year' by working and still receive ‘their benefits. The present ceil ing is $1,200 a year • Federal funds for cri|)pled and retarded childis’n would he • Widows coidd diiiw bene fils at age 60 inslyad of walling until 62 Forgetful Olcf Flier Survives Plane Crash I AMAIUUUO, Tex (APi W, Warner of Fort Worth i walked away unhurt iifter his i single-engine plane crash-land-(sl at the end of a runway al Tradewind Airport Tue.kd.ay. Warner, a flier since Hlltl, said he forgot to lower the land ing gear. He estimated damage to his plane at $1,600. (Adv«rflttm«nt) Now Many Wear FALSE TEI^H With Little Worry j (hikhiii* It.d. I W. 1(1. I•u■ll F. CnUII K.mkiI.I 15m .o IIm t I O r V,r,Oli iiin b (l.llMtfU. ■ .ill ll|n.Ml. r I'O r I’rrMl.l, Irving F. FIriiiiiig A.,i.O,nl r,e„„„r, unit llninrh Shiniinrr Fai l Foi l ill ( :.>ii.l>rll.- IV1. II.-II Tiraiulrr M. Fi.M-»llnr (.rilliii Ma.jniir iriVd.’l Fll.-i> M. IliM .M U JtiiiieH it. Koliiii ItOAItl) OF DIKFCT'OUS Clark J, Atlums Maliloii A. IteiiHwn, Jr. Conrad N. Cliiireli JamCH (Jarkaon R. tJare (TiininingH Delos F. Ilaiiilin John (J. Waddell 2 Hospitalized in Bus Crash TIIK PONTIAC’ VVI^VDNKSDAV. MAY !i, Jun.'S HOLLAND (AHKTwo youths were hospitalized and 48 others suffered minor injuries when their school bus collided with an oii(U)nilng car and pluiiged into a lS‘f(S»t deep culvert Tuesday. Tlic bus was carrying metn-hers of tlie West CHtawn High S(‘Ihk)I track Utatn to a tneet at (Irnnd llaitlda High ScIi(k>1. The brakes of the vehicle failed as the bus cuune down an exit ram|) (tf U.S. 31 a half mile from llollatul, Ottawa ('ouiify .Sheriff's officers said. Daniel Ari/.mandc/., 18, of Holland was reported in fair condition In llollanrl Hospital with a concussion. Another Holland yOufll, Korrest Hamilton, 18, ' was listed in K(mkI condition with po.ssil)le ilnternal injuries. * A * The driver of the car, Ronnie .Jones, 20, of Holland was not Injured. Jrf.' Successful Marine Raid KUIs $ Cong DA NANO, Viet Nam 181 O.H. Marine infantry s«|unds played a deadly cot and mouse game With Communist guerrillas yesterday and killed eight in their most successful operation of the war, Two leathernecks were wounded In the action near Hlnh Thai village, eight miles south of Da Nang. The Marltum capture^l two l/'hlrmse-made rifles, some gre nades and several |K>unds of documenis that Included aic ture erly and to get intelligence," n Marine officer said. lying six lOtimm recoilless cannon and four 5(M:ulltHu‘ machine gun.s were out for the first'time in combat. Five of them moved in a column with six Marine medium tanks as a blor'king force They saw no action; .Several wounded Viet Cong were found In Le My village by a patrol from the 2nd Marine Hattallon They liiid b<«en hit In a fight near the same Village yesterday Three Marines wcie wounded, two by bullets and one by a mity* •JOO INI'ANTIIYIVIKN Nearly !I(K) Marine infantrymen were in action "We will have to stay out there much longer to really clean that place out," said Capt. I Peter Yadlowsky of .ler.sey (.’ity,i N.J, I Le My Is a sprawling village complex in the footliills eight miles from Du Nang. .SNIPEIt FlllE A bullet tore into a Murine's stomuch as F.cho (Company ns-Nuulted the village under snliier he did after two and a half hours do we get sniping from here on tile operating talile at the even In daylight?" one Marine Marine hospital in 4)a Nang. |officer asked. Villagers told a familiar sto-l "i yuW ^js head and shoulders ry: "The Viet Cong were here ^ tpe window," said Cpl. .John a,pd they come back Ip terrorize | Heffelfinger of one guerrilla, us at niglil j "ji^ pulled away when I fired. "Maybe so, but how tlio hcllil think I got him." English is such • era«y<<|uUl language that It spells ltd 48MMid basic sounds of vowels und coii' sonants In sorno 2,000 different ways. * CMIOUSESI Scholls lino pads fire "Wliy did it have to be me?” Ihc wounded Leatherneck .shouted in pain A medical corpsmun bandaged his wound. The corps-man, Frank O. Saddler of St. Louis, Mo , grahbc a ri'miKMAi.n llflWAM K. II via* Pr*>ld«n SutImM Msn*«*r AilvKi'tliflnr Dlmrtor Mental Health Ideal Rates Nation’s Salute Througiiout the United Htati's National Mental Health Week Is be ' Ing observed. Various events are slated to hlkblikht llie care and treatment of those sulfiMing from mental illness. Lf)cally, no signilicant activities are planmal for observance of ll\c period by adininlslrators of Pontiac State Hospital, It in fdt that the year-round npen-d(M>r |Hiliey fo scheduled <• groiiiis and projection of the institution hy staff spenkera to in-tercalcd gathcringa in effect here la preferable to the once-a-ycar open hotiHea held hy many comparahle inatitutiona. In elaborating on the local plan, Medical Superintendent Dr. Donald W. Martin pointed out that during the past year it had enabled 1(),0()() personk to familiarize themselves with the hospital, and urged, the citizenry to take ^dvantage of such opportunity. ★ ★ ★ The PRESa warmly commends the staff and personnel of mental institutions everywhere who arc giving so much of themselves in the cause of alleviating one of mankind’s most serious and baffling disabilities. War. Then after the recovery from that shock begun the f a r longer phase of seesaw fighting and attrition along a fairly stabilized front tliat roughly paralleled the political division of the country. ★ ★ ★ 'I'he \ ieinamcHC war had no such sudden hcginiiinirs. ^ has been, until recently,^ Kuerrilhi warfare; it ha.s seen no mass movements of troops from iiorlh lo HOiiih and hack again. The war is eharaetcrized hy pockets of fighling (hat erupt and di.Hsi-pale; (here is no definite front along which dug-in armies bailie. Total victory for eithh- side apr pears unlikely in Viet Nam. But un til stand-off Is leached a n d recognized, It is questionable whetlier any meaningful peace negotiatlorLems lo be called for is a law prohibiting the traffic in names without the permission of till' individuals involved. As one who completely supports equality of citizenship for all, I abhor the ima|ge created by our Negro legislators who assert that Negroos will not vote mpre than once every four years and need special legislation. ' ★ ★ a' Niicli legislators are insulting our Negro eiti-'zeiis when they Insist that most of them will not use their ballot more than once every four years. Also, it is insulting to suggest that if they have not voted ofleiier, they will not be concerned enough about keeping their names on the rolls, to sign and return the card which is sent automatically.: A rase in p o i ii t, the Russell-Woods Community, predoniinanlly Negro, shows a voting record of one hundred per cent participation in the last election and almost as high in I!)(52. Cheers for such a community. ★ ★ ; ★ We have been witnessing a dramatic appeal in Selma to ir^surc the Negro voting privilege. Is it not ironical that in Michigan some as.sert that the Negro does not value this great privilege enough to use it? This cliargc is rank injustice to our Negro dtizen.s and lo their intelligence. Would these legislators contend that they do not represent their constituents in years other than the presidential ones? Do they believe their constituents are not interested enough to go lo the ballot box to vote for their Covernor, Congressmen, legislators and local officials? •k if Jr Please do not commit the Negro citizen to anything other than first-class citizenship, with all of its rights and obligations. Being able to vote is one of our greatest advantages and also one of our greatest responsibilities. • ] CONCERNED CITIZEN Opinions on Teacher’s Choice of Words I !im liappy !(,»Iiave Glenn Hartman as the liead of the Pontiac Education As.sociation. He is liiKhly qualified and sincerely dedicated. “Dis|zusted” can rest assured that if the teachers did not want him, he would not have been elected. Teachers are not above eonstructivc criticism. In fact, we welcome it. However, I truly feel it is utijust to "condemn” an individual for the use of one word in a speech, NANCY MAYWHOOR TEACHER It was interesting to note that citizens are finally placing imporlanee on remarks made by tepchers to the extent that they are taking time to voice 4heir opinions in The Pontiac Press. It Is regrettable that some thought it more important to attack Mr. Hartman’s character than to comment on the significance of his text. „ . , CORNELIA JACKSON PONTIAC TEACHER American government concerning Communist infiltration. But there can be no doubt that a state of anarchy developed in Santo Domingo „and that it was a wise precaution for President Johnson to order American Marines to land, not only to protect American eiti-•zens but to prevent the Injury of many intioeent persons in the Dominican Republic who were in no way participants in the quarrels between the various factions. If Pontiac teachers want to make a more favorable Impression on the public, they .should grant freely that Hartman made a mistake and then go ahead. Trying to excuse an obvious wrong . Injures their general standing and leads the public to wonder at their sincerity. They should remember they are trying to convince us they are superior people in whose hands we are fortunate lo entrust our children. DENNY We, teachers at Washington Junior High School, express our feelings toward the article written regarding Glenn Hartman, Washington Junior High teacher and newly elected head of P.E.A. This author castigates Mr. Hartman for improper word choice, yet he does not sign his own name. Mr. Hartman’s ability as a teacher was questioned because he used the word “hell” -in a speech directed ta adult educators. The article would thus imply that anyone who colors his language with an occasional epithet outside of the classroom is incapable of educating our children. Since teachers do not use these “colorful phrases" in the classroom and children are often overheard to use same, one wonders what the source of said learning might be. DAVID E. HAMMON, AL THOMAS, DOROTHY MYERS, ELAINE PYRROS, EVELYN McLEAN, SUZANNE BODARY, NANCY MAYWHOOR, SUSAN MILLER, VIRGINIA HAROUTUNIAN, BETSY CARNALL, RUTH WARD AND RAYMOND H. REICHE I have had Mr. Hartman as a teacher for three years and never has anything .but superb teaching come from him. He Is a credit to the School System and teachers should be proud to have him.as a leader. JOHN MASON BI.OOMFIELD TOWNSHIP The United States action, therefore, is based upon two points — the protection of the lives of foreign nationals, and * the preservation of the territorial integrity and political independence of the Dominican Republic against acts of aggres-^sion by imperialistic govern- • mentsf. This was the fundamental principle originally proclaimed in the Monroe, Doctrine, and it has been preserved in essence in the charter of the Organization of American States. I heartily agree with the letter in regard to Mr. Glenn Hartman using profanity in his talk over WPON. He sets a bad example himsejf while trying to tell others to set the right'one. What can we expect of our teen-agers and children whejn w® have leaders and teachers who swear, smoke, etc. Let us (stand by our Christian teachers. MRS. FRANK A. SIPLE AN EX-SCHOOL TEACHER WATERFORD TOWNSHIP “Disgusted” was very much put out by one of our leading educators saying “teachers are worth a H-^ of a lot more than they are getting.” Instead of worrying about a trifle, why don’t you worry about something worthwhile? How did we get in a situation where many of our educators have to: hold two jobs to maintain the highest standard of living in the world? There has been too much fodling around with trifles. R. F. D. I am a student of Washington Junior High in the ninth grade. Mr. Hartman was my speech teacher in seventh and eighth grade. H^.is an excellent teacher with good, clean morals. I feel this is most important. Eveiy student has heard the word “hell.” ' We of Washington consider ourselves mature, young adults and* ' wish to be treated as Such and do not want to be kept in a glass cage. MAXINE THOME h INK PONTIAC rnKSS. WKiyNK.SI)AV, MAY !i, 11X1.5 X Ray Won t Curb Sense of Smell/Taste Q A f«w tnonlliH n(jo I liad - five X-ray trealtnentn for bur-hKIs of tlie shoulder. They cured my bursitis hut almost immed-iatply afterward 1 lost my sense of tnste. Could the treatmnnts have caused this? A- In m 0 s t persons wlio l«s7!d‘''t«sle ll is the sense of smell that has been lost Taste per se, which Is ap preclali*d hy Ihe tongue, is limited to sw(>el, .sour, salty and bitt««r This sense may he lost In disease's of Ihe totiKue or the mo ves that supply it. 'llie ‘‘taste'’ of flavors Is lost In diseases of Ihe nose or olfactory nerve. X ray tts-almeuts to your shoulder would not cause cither of the.se sensory losses. Q My doctor is i^ivihit tin Mautrax-N for hi^h blood pi(‘s sure. Does it have any side effecis and can II he hounlit without a prescript ioti"' A- flaulrax-N , is a coml)ina tioii of rauwolfla and a diurelic. ‘|1ie combination allows for a low(H'“ effect dose of holh drugs and this lessens Ihe chances of undesirable side effects. It should not be taken by persons with severe kidney disease. The drug is a great help in re, ducing Ihe blood pressure hut It' cannol he (lurchased "over Ihe counter," /adiculitla of the spine. (7(add you suggest anything that Vvould help me? Q My doctor says I have A- You , have an inflammation of the rimt of one of the large nerves that emerges from your spinal cord. Movemeids of the spin e usually cause piiln and when the |)aln Is severo a back brace or IsKly cast may have lo be worn. Meanwhile your doctor should search for and remove the cause, If possible, (WrIOan lor Nmitn.) PONTIAC MAU OPTICAL CINTIR "All I said was; Show me a filter that delivers the taste and I’ll eat my hat." 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Now, famllleM wallintj to lie evacuated .sleep op the Vidorlan lurniture In the lobby. Cuba Exiles Buoyed by Infervetitlon MIAMI, I'la, (AIM Cuban exiles, buoyed in spirit by U S. Intervention in the Oominican Repiiblir, feel it could also happen in Havana. Support lor I’residenI .lohn-Kon’s dispatehing of troops, crit-Idzerl by some Latin Ameri cans, was expressed In Miami’s exile colony. Juanita Castro, 'sisler of Cuban I'rime Minislei Kidel Castro, said, "The U S. decision to send Marines is quite correct." MLss Castro, who live.s here, added: "The free world must applaud this decision against eommuni.sni. For a long lime Fidel has been sending arms and troops to Santo Domingo." ADVANCE F’ormer Cuban President ('ar-los Prio Soi'arra.s said the events in the Dominican Republic "can advance the process of liberation of Cuba." "The disembarkation of Marines in the Dominican Re-piihlic is the beginning of a new era in the fight for freedom in the world,” said Dr. Salvador Lew in an exile radio broadcast. * * * Dr. I/€w, who frequently voices the sentiment of the exile colony, said: "The Cubans support the valiant action of President Johnson, whidl*undoubted-ly signifies that wherever a country fights for its freedom, there the United States will be to support It. "Our compatriots fighting within Cub^ know now that help from the free world will not be lacking for them at the opportune moment." ★ ★ w A^ refugee publication. Pas-quin, asked: “Is it not clear that President Johnson’s action^has an enormous significance for Cubatts? There has been criticism of the United States for not having provided air support for the Giron Beach expedition (the 1961 Bay of Pigs invaders) but now suddenly - a change of policy in Washington” Zig-Zag, an exile weekly, said Castro has been warning Latin American countries of such matters as the Dominican rebellion. "From his Red sanctuary of the Caribbean, Fidel Castro has been .announcing^ new Communist calamities for almost a month," It said. SUITLY DEPOT j The Marines have liii iieil a polo field into a supply de|M>l | ami helieopler landing si rip. j The tropical .shrubhery and lawns liavi' been .scarred h\ tanks, ai,ii|)lilhlou,s triiek.s am| foxholtm. j Water l. mothproofed. In 9 No Monoy Down beautifuT colors. long wear with little No Money Down core! Excellent value! v DuPonWuxury Nylon soft, 2-tone pattern Gracefully patterned Commer. 501® nylon . Incredibly sfrong 501® nylon, wonder- |^A fully luxurious ufider- ^ ^ foot. 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MAy S, 1I»(I5 Prof Recalls Unhecfic Days Today's Frenzied Campus Sad Place NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -Collt>gi> sliidanis: Is there gaiety In your lives? Do you save any lime tor lelsureT Or Is It nil a grim, academir pressure coidieir that mnkes you feel like a soggy carrol ? Are your Hasses large, your professors impersonal, your scIkkiI .seemlrrgly a research arm of the gov<*rnmenl Inslruid of an Ivy lower ? Hecall for a moment (lie way ll was. Dr William C. Devane remembers (he campus pare of nnodier era, and he hr lieves somr'diing has been los(, (‘l,AS.S OK III20 Devane gradualed widi (he Yale Class ol 1920, Me was dean of Yale College for 25 years before his reliremenl in 19«3 Now a( fifi, he is back (o teaching, Tire sof( simken profes.sor of English sal in (he [HMice of his office al Yale and talked of the style of his undergnidmde days. was time, for classmate Thorn , ton Wilder to begin his playwriting and Stephen Vincent Benet | his iMKiks. Henry Luce and Bri- | Ion Hadden, who lain' crcfiled ; Time nuignzine. Jn'camc friend.s In (hat Class of HI20. SPUTNIK l.ADNCIIED When Sputnik was Imiuched ii The pUililem of the absentee pi'ofessor, a ;imn caught up Int rc.s«‘arch projects to the detriment of his leacfilng, was an underlying r'ntson for the slu-rlerit "tree .speech" revolt al the Berkeley camptrs of the University of California, Devane be- liev He .said Yale recently sent around a clrrarlnr suggc.sting that professors ease the pressure on graduate students. The strain was getting foo much, he said. "We weren't that way," De-zane said. "We had time for 'un. l%7, Devane said. "The tone and tempo ol the society sharp erred Theif was more cornpell lion and it particularly aflecled the student. ” "These are prosperous times," he went on "There's a great push to go to college Overcrowded inslllirlions '.lake away privacy and leisitr <> Tla* students arc wor king liar dcr and more effectively, but it's a question whether they're getting as g(M)d an education" The stiidiMils there "had been ncglerled They were revolting for .somclhlng they had not had in a long lime. Of course, research is entirely necessary. Birt there must be a balance between research and teach- ing VETERANS SERIOUS "It began to change after the war. Tire veteran.s were serious. They knew what they wanted." Dcvanc came to Yale as a veteran of World War I. "But we weren't bloodied by the war," he s.rid. ‘The time and the tide made for literature. From 191.1 to I92.'l there was an artistic and literary renaissance at the major colleges." Of the modern student. Devane says: "I like laiys to be boys and not be beatniks They'll say it's freedom, but I like to see students well dressed. I like to sec girls at their best — they so seldom arc. Tlicy're^ tisually sloppy." In Devanc’s day, two students shared three rmims. "Now in that same space tliey get four piMiple. Where do they have room to do their thinking and .studying?" The world has gone through grave times since Ids Idyllic school days, Di'vane says, and that's what makes tlie contnn-IMirary student so serious. Tixtay’s world “isn't the same one that I grew up in," he said, "and I liked that other world. " Cloud Has Silver Lining What the students had in those days Devanc said, was an air of lightheartedness, gaiety, privacy, leisure. They worked at their studies, but there Wasn't that fierce competition. There was time to compose Bonnets and light verse. There NOT A PROBLEM And in the classrooms, Dc-vane believes, there is less gtxHl leaching, although he says this has not been a problem at Yale. But Yale recently had a student demonstration when a popular teacher of philosoj)hy was turned down for tenure, or permanent appointment. “It was their fear of losing g(xxl teaching" that motivated the students. Devane .said. BOSTON (AP) An elderly Lowell woman became upset at the E.s.sex subway .station when slic realized she had misplaced her coal. Natalie C’oelho, in her 70s, enlisted thq help of train starter Henry McCusker who returned with her 1'ue.sday to the Dover station where she had boarded the train. They found the coat draped over a turnstile. Mrs. Coelho quickly a.scertained that $2,980 in bills was still securely .sewn in the lining. PmEI ilEIS 38 Models and Sizes to choose from the ^ole! IK SEIECTION! Riding I Reels Starting at $^|§95 Starting at m |95 18” Rotary Starting at $3gS8 SPECIAL YARDMAN *64 model - NOW ONLY.... . tggBs Society Hill Lawn Food •5000 sq. ft. coverage •Non-burninig •Feeds grass for months Just lay "Chaigfli . or buy on oasy forms ' where your doHdr buys MILES more Mf IV. SAfilW • 146IV. HUROIt FE 4 9970 333-7917 Open Mon. thru Fri. 'til 9—Sot. 'til 6 I*. M. . I T/". ’’j; I UK l•ON'l'IA(: PHKSS, VVKDNKSDAV, MAY fl, iiMi.Y A 18 { Can you find the Eagle in this Osmun’s ad? V C!ori»fnl. There are two of them. Bnt the imnoiftant one for men is the Eacfle suit j ^ Careful. There are two of them. But the impoiftant one for men is the Eagle suit shown at the right. It’s typical of the hundreds we’ve been unpacking for summer. Come in and choose yours. The classic Eagle worlgnanship assijres you of a flawless fit. The latest lightweight fabrics (like softly burnished silk sharkskin) and new styling details (like the L-shaped lapel) keep you cool and crisp looking. All this plus the well-known Osmun’s exclusives: Free parking . . . your choice of charge plans ... the best brand names always . . . free alteiPSTtions . . . and the People of Osmun’s. When it comes to looking for better ways to serve you ... they’re always the first to look. In fact, they’te absolutely eagle-eyed about it. EAGLE LIGHTWEIGHT SUMMER SUITS from 579.95 part 0/ Pontiac since 1931 STORES FOR MEN & YOUN6 MEN FREE ^ARKING at ALL STORES Downtown Pontiac Open Fri. & Mon. HU 9 I Tel-Huron Center in Pontiac « , Open Every Night 'til 9 ■ Tech Plaza Center in WaTren ! • Open Every Night 'til 9 j. ^ A U IIK. P()lljTIA(' nU^SS. WKIiNKSDAV, ^^AY fl, iuM -’i- AKIiougli lh« m«K)n 8«s«jw» lo I This Is because ns the earth rise In the east ami set In the s p I n s. on Its axis eastward, west, It actually Is traveling,In everylhlnu In the sky seems to easlward direction, acc'ord- move In the o|>|H)slle, lug lo The lhK)k of Knowleglge. ' wg>'d direction The first rccoixl of * sho» maker In America can b« traced back to MI20, ac(;ordlng to The Hook of Knowledge. This first sluMunaker's name was Thomas Htiird, or Beard. He arAved In Salem, Massachusetts In IdM, and was engaged by the Massa^ clmseilts Bay Company to rn«ka ..................lists siioes for the colonis FRETTER SAYS: FANTASTIC SPECIALS IN EVERY STORE NOW! lim.KU S (;KIIMANS (HUCTION .II:WS llcrlin |)0 licc (ifliciiils lire .shown in lil.'t.'l ns llicv (|ucslion(>(l locnl .lews beforr h.niiling them lo jnil for fnrllirr inlcrrognlion. .Scenes ' like llii.s were fn^iliilr in (lermany during Ihe firsi diiys of Ihe Na/,i boyeoll /igainsi Ihe .lews. Germany in Turmoil—2 Victories Encouraged Hitler (KDITOIt'S NOTE - - From ihv monwut hr took jmwrr in 19X1, Adolf Hitler started C.er-maiiy on the roar/ of eomfuest. The follotehui seeond of jour articles on Ihtlerite Oermany, tells of der fuehrer's, assumption of dictatorial power.) ly weak, lie made a .serie.s of “iHS'e speeches” In.sisting that he would never resort to force lo achieve his forein policy goals. By LOYAL GOULD BKIILIN (API Shortly aft- er he gained power in I'JTl, Adolf Hitler and his fellow Nazis began looking for an excuse that would give them an unfettered hand in shaping the destinies of Germany and eventually the world. “Today Germany belongs to : us," they used to say. "Tomorrow Ihe world." They found their chance for compicle power over (iermany in less than a month. On F'eb. 27, the Parliament building in Berlin, the Reichstag, burned down Historians still argue whether Communists or some of Hitler's close followers planned the blaze. Hitler blamed it on the Reds and demanded absolute power to fight social unrest. LAW PASSED Parliament pa.ssed a law giving all its powers to Hitler personally. With no more parliamentary rc.straints, Ihe Nazis announced a national boycott of Jewish shops, excluded Jews from public office, journalism, farming and the theater. Bui four months later, he announced that Germany was withdrawing from the international disarmament conference and froni the League of Nations. SECRET ORDERS Hitler gave .secret orders to start rebuilding the German armed forces. He called off the Versailles reparations payments to create the fir.st of many international crises. Others followed over a three-year period until Germany occupied the demilitarized left bank of the Rhine in 19.36. I'Yancisco Franco, the vSpanish I and order. The Wesleni Allies Fascist who revolted against the failed to come to the ai saw no chance for error, no shadow of defeat on his path toward war. And massed crowds gathered at his rallies cheered him with chorused cries of "Sieg Heil!’’ — hail victory. Anl-Semitic signs — "Jews I enter this town at their own risk” — popped up all over Ger-niany and the first Nazi confen-tration camp was opened ..in Dachau near Munich. The governor said he was taking the step to obtain federal disaster relief funds especially because of extensive damage to public schools — estimated at more than $2 million. The Nuernburg laws finally deprived Jews of German citizenship, forbade marriage be-j tween Jews and gentiles, and even prohibited male Jews from employing female gentile servants under 35. The road was prepared that: eventually led to the gas ch3m-1 bers of Auschwitz. With hfs opponents pushed aside, Hitler turned his attention to foreign relations. Since the Reich was diplomatically isolated and militaril- State officials have estimated overall damage in last Thursday's quake, which claimed seven Ijves, at $15 diillion, including more than $5 million to public facilities. . When he arrived in Viennd^ thousands of Austrians lined up to greet him with shouts of “Heil Hitler!” He told them that Austria was just the beginning. He said he intended to achieve the union of all Germans in a greater Germany and mentioned specifically the Sudeten-land in Czechoslovakia with its three million Germans. THREATENED WAR Alpena Man Is Killed ALPENA (AP)-Edward Oso-linski, 51, of Alperta, was killed near here early today’when his car left the road and hit a tree, state police reported. With the help of Mu,ssolini, Hitler threatened war and frightened British and French leaders into supporting his annexation of the Sudentenland. Their surrender came at a four-power summit conference in Munich. The Czechs were not allowed to take part. On his return to London from Munich, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain said he had brought back "peace with honor” and expressed his conviction that there would be “peace in our time.” Recall Good Old Days: Nickel 'Dogs' a Hit PORT HURON (AP) - The Coney Island Hot Dog Palace, recalling the good old days of the 1920s, sold hot dogs for five cents Monday. In eight hours, the staff of 15 girls sold 17,511 hot dogs, using 70 gallons of chili, 22 gallons of mustard and 400 pounds of buns. This was about one hot dog for every two residents in the city. OLD* FttlTTW. Oti» *1 Origin*! DU««unt«r« APPLIAlljCE buyers ATTENTIONF Mir NIW SOUTHGATE STORE OPENS TODA^jctt CELEBRATE I'VE CUT EVERY PRICE IN EVERY ST^GRI -MANY PRICES CUT AS MUCH AS »25-HUr IH TODAY AND REALLY SAVE MONEY! Whoop9olll My now Southgato *foro opens today and am I celebrating . . . This is it, rny biggest _»a « <> the entire year . . . I've cut every price and every one of my 8 great stores have joined in to he p make it the most successful sales event of the year. Now is the time to boy, no matter what type of appliance, TV or Stereo you want, I've got it and the price has been cut over and above my low, low levels , . . Tbit It the one tale you can't afford to r 21" RCA COMBINATION O*'*/ 169.00 ^4-Lb. Automatic Washi|r Hot Point Upriihl Fraazar COLOR TV 249^^ Danish Walnut a**.* Elnith All Daluii* 'IlnQBO F»alur*i lOal !Sow Only 149®* Th* LOiRC « Model M2708 U Elegant, trim, compact styltd m*tal cabintt In grainnd Walnut color or grainnd Mahogany color. DIpolo Anttnn*. 8 tPCAKCRt ElyhtZtnlth quality high tidtilty ipttktri: two 10* wooftrt, two 4* and four 3W* twtkttrt. MICRO-TOUCH* 20 TONE ARM World'i most Imitatadi Only 2 grama (1/14 oz.) nttdin prtt-turn. Play your rncords a lllttlmt with virtually no rtcord wtar. Dual Channal Sttrto AMpllllar Zanith 20 “Staraa frtclalan” Racard Changer demblnatlen Laudnaaa/Starao Balance Ceniralt NEW ZENITH OF,UJX( VIDEO HANGE Get Fretter’s Low Low Price 82-CHANNEL TUNING SYSTEM FULL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE INSTANT CREDIT-3 YEARS TO PAY POimAC WAREHOUSE TELEGRAPH RD. V2 MILE S. ORCHARD LAKE RD. / JWi/e y«rlh of Mira, Ir Milo OPEN SUNDAY - FE 3-7051 OPEN DAILY 10-9 SUNDAY 11-6 NO MONEY DOWN - UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY iiiaii' There was peace for a while — even though German troops marched into Prague the following year on trumped-up grounds fo maintaining peace Eyeball to EyebalTon Eye Care LANSING (AP) -—’Medical eye doctors and ' optometrists clashed Tuesday over a Senate proposal thilt would give the optometrists new powers in eye examination. At an hour-long hearing before the Senate State Affairs Com^ttee, the Alp’s, or op-thalmolb^ts, declared that the public welfare would be endangered by allowing optometrists to diagnose eye diseases, employ drugs for diagnosis' and exert other new privileges. The optometrists argued that the proposals were in line with Increased optometric educatimi and would permit a more complete examination of patients. Optometrists now can examinb «y(M to find defects correctab^ by io test for focu^g viaton^Hnd teamwork, and I fit Dr. Erwin CTahassey, chairman of the opthalmology sec- tion of the Michigan State Medical Society, showed the committee a series of large pictures of diseased eyes, each under a beading that asked, “if this were your eye, would y))u risk a nonmedical diagnosis?” • Dr. Harold Falls, professor of opthalmology at the University of Michigan, said that “should this legislative body see fit to grant optometery these requested amendments, injurious and dangerouis consequences to the ocular health of the people of this state would result. everything we've asked for by education and experience." ■He said there has be-Cn no abuse in -six states with laws similap to that propo.sed. Britton told the committee that optometrists cannot perform a complete eye examination without the pse of drugs in some Dr. Gordon Heath of Indiana University deblared that optometric training has increased from an apprentice program at; the turn of the century to a I five-year minimum course currently is being increased to six yeaTs. He said such a bill would Jet up two standards of eye care. Dr. Robert Britton, president of the Michigan Optometric Association, said can justify feV: - lit ’T Heath and Britton both sgid the courses include pathology and pharmacblogy, relating to the diagnosis and use of drugs. The coriimittee is expected to apt on the bill next vyeekv Gift Suggestion mTHUTVEAWlKlM Heat, Stain, Scratch Reshtant SERV-A-TRAY With Removdble Serving Tray • Genuine WalnuT Wood Trim • Walnut Wood Finish.Troy and Shelf W Gleaming Brass Plated Accents A help to the hostess. Rol|s on 3" Casters, may be Used as TV pr stereo toble, utility cart, serving tray or portable bar-WilF give years pf service! DOWNTOWN PONTIAC DRAYTON PLAINS BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE mile PONTIAC MALL SHOP WITHOUT CASH - "CHARGE IT" AT KRESGE’S V-r. , ' ^...(-s' .'Xt.',., vim PONTIAC PHESS, WEDNESDAY. MAY l»(W UPSTAtiKU — Youiigstors take a curtain call after pre-Renting "The Enchanted Forek," but an unscheduled performance of the tot in the foreground nearly brought down the house at the Newton. Mass., YMt^A. Excited by applause, the boy started running in front of tlie stage, when he tripped over a light fixture. 'Dust From Viet Nam War Tastes the Same as It Did in Sicily' lly IIAl. IIOYI.IC DA NANO, SouUi Viet Nam (AP) — Coming here from the ifnllod Stales is like entering a vast whispering gallery full of eclines. *S 0 m I course, may be m e a n t n gful-gild many, per-fore e, cannot be. Thin is an arena where you have an un easy feeling I hat gossip is a major industry. nOYI.E It may well turn out that this Is one of those places where a fellow is Jiist as much an au-tliority after 24 hours here as after 24 months here - I’d hate to say 24 years, flome have commented that the major problem here pinpoints the conflict between the Oriental adjustment to a long attrition and the Western world’s desire for a (pitek solution. Whether It is tluU simple I'll be darned l know. DIGNIFIED GUAY Out here gray hairs have some dignity, cvep though they be sparse. I nm 54, nn age which most Orientals and many lieutenants and captains iri an army don't acliieve. As tills is my thiru war, many polite people, wlio don't mind being bored by the reminis-censes of the elderly, have asked me; "Ilow do you think the war here is different from World War II and the Korean action.” Inevitably, 1 have asked nriy-self the same question, Frankly, I am still new and perplexed here. Hut It seems to me that all wars are Ixitn alike and different. And here are a few comparisons I find, however, may have some validity: TAS TE IS SAME The dust tastes tlie same os it did in Sicily. The mud Is deeper than it was in France or Germany or Italy, but no deeper than it was in Ko- " 'j'hc back scat of the Jeep is still the poorest place to lie if you are going over Jiumpy roads. / If you double the number of our ti‘oo|)s In any area tlie prices of fo(Sl and services provided by the natives tend to triple. INDOCTRINATION On the other hand, our men seem to have lieen to a greater degree indoctrinated to tlie really,atlon that our mllllnry goals are (lackaged with political goals. Our soldiers aj)|Muir to have been taught more respect- for the natives' liidividuality apd Ills dreams for a ladter life, which all men on (>arth pc-rsplre for. As to I he conduct of the war Itself, my initial Impressions, based on previous exiierienccs, are not inimcHiiatcly hopeful. Hie .^eiccessful termination of a war re<|iilres the sulHiiilng or extermination of the enemy, 'llils means a taking of hills and a holding of valleys and a restoration of peaceful commerce. PUIlPOSEFlll. MEN As of now, however. It seems tansion of trade” PUSH GOODS It urged managers to push their gcHHis in store windows, posters, catalogues, newspapers and neon lights. “How unimpressive an neon ads!” Pravda said. At presejit, advertising in the Soviet Union appears only in some newspapers - and then it is relegated to the back pages. “Our advertising is unimpressive and Ineffective,” Pravda said. “It has no clever th^ghts and it is devoid of catchy phrases. ’ LITTLE INFLUENCE “The influence on people is not great. In this case it is no sin to learn from foreign firms." The newspaper devoted a parting shot to writers and artists. It cited the case of a revolutionary era poet, Vladimir Mayakovsky, who dabbled in advertising. The newspaper declared: “Advertising is a broad, noble field of activity for the poet, writer and arti.st” 3 Russians to Visit Michigan Dairy Farm BAY CITY (AP) - Three members of the Soviet U«ion delegation to the United Nations are scheduled to arrive here Wednesday for a five day tour of an American dairy farm. The group will stay at the farm of Wilfred Leix in Fostor-ia. They are scheduled to visit Michigan State University Friday. EARN MORE OR ^AVIMGS SAYINGS IN BY THE 10TH OF THE MONTH EARN FROM THEISTAT COMPOUNDED AND PAID QUARTERLY CURRENT RATE Krtablinhed in lH90~yever mined paying a dividend. Over 7.5 yearn of tound management—your anuranee of neeurity. Anetn now over 107 million dollart. CAnTOL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION :75 West Huron Phone 336-7127 Pownlown Delroil Oflico Washington Blvd. Bldg. Corner Slate Btreel WO 2-1078 Home Office Lansing Southfield Office-,: 27215 Soi^hfleid ’ atU Mile Roerd KE 7^6125 , Member Federal Homo Loan Bonk System Jr., MisseSf Half Sizes OAOlOlf mm ORems Ideal for travel and summer wear. Permanently pleated, sleevelen and shoit-slccve, I and 2-pc style* in spring patterns and colors. Easily laundered Dacron«polyestcr. 7-15;10-l8;D)f-24)f. *D»Vont trademmk NEW SHIFT GOWNS Rcj;. 2.991 daily printed O or softly striixid cotton. t One size' flatters every ^ v ■ figure. Ali NYICREST SUPS Reg. 2.97. White Dir cron*-nylon-cotton I blend with double skirt, j 32-44. *DuPont trudenutrk TEXTURED NYLONS Reg. 79i. A delicate, alL over lacy pattern. Black, pecan (brown), or cinnamon. 9-11. 65% Dacron*, 35% CoHbn SLEEVOESS BLOUSES Reg, 1,97. Easy-care 65% Dacron*, 35% cotton. White, pink, blue, mint, maize or bcig*. 32-38. ^DuPont trademark f46 Famous Naifie, Higher Priced, Nationally Advertised! WATCHES /588 W plus fed. lax Thesn look twice-.a* expensive! Dependable, nationally advertised watches, white gold or yellow gold-plated’dress and sports models. Women^s Reg. 7.94 A QQ HES... T SWISS WATCHES . DOWNTOWN PONTIAC BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE PONTIAC MALL SHOP WITHOUT CASH - "CffARCS/T" AT KRESGE’S rill'i I’ON l'IAC I'HK-HS. WKDNK.SDAV.MAV !}, KfV7i, Sinmlntvtl rvarls NECKLACES WITH EARRINGS Single Strand 8mm Choker . . . 4.97 2-Strand 8mm Choker . . . . V.^V 2-Strand 8mm Matinee . . .... 9.97^ 2-Strand 9mm Matinee . . .-..12.97 } aliivs to 22.9.7 Sniin-siiioolli finish looks liko (rnniiiir ju-iirl. Miiml-kiioll<‘>Hs include niiitcliiiig can ines. *nu> Kril.l.l l>> f Women^s Lustrous Lulturod l*rurl FASHION RINGS K.-S. 9.95 Wonderful array of exquisite JW Jljf ^ Importi'd Swiss Movements PENDANT WATCHES cultured pearls in rich, 10k Rold niounlinp. 4 days only! • l'lu.l«lrralTM 12.88 Klcfiantlv styled 5\atclics mV M flv m Kith ac<'iiratf Swiss W mMMM /•9I MmOO • l ax. Save at K mart^ and ^^Char^e 7t” ii ;• Mother Will Appreciate . . . TRIM SANDAL STYLE SLIPPER Mother^s Day-Discount Price 976 Charffe It Gift slippers by Ajtollo! C.lioose from excilinft black, prix or rich, new brandy etdor. Stipple Marsbniullow ■< accented with saddle stitch-in|t. Bouyanl fiill-foain innerstdiv of iiialchinjt vinyl. Sizes 4 to 10. (djt Ftishiinis for the Mother-To-He MATERNITY WEAR TOMIX-'N-MATCH I{efX.2M7en. 4 Days Onlyl 2 Hi Blouses, jackets , slacks, skirts, pedal-pushers, .laniaica shorts iti choice of fahrics, colors. .Misses’ 8-2(),,Iuniors’ 7-l.">, Special Purchase Timed for Mothers Day DUSTERS AND SHIFTS Compare fit 2.99 Short-sleeve and sleeveless dusters and A-line shifls. In ;")()% Avril rayon ami .'>()% cotton hlemls, or 100% cottons for easiest care, (dioice of zipper or hiitton fronts, lace aiul embroidery tritns. Solids, jirints, checks. S-M-L, 12-18. (.orp. tnule quilted satin in black or • tifbt blue. Matching crepe ‘ I: M»le.4t»10M. L7S Women*s Turkish Toe., Brocade Style S:::: EXOTICLOOK Orange brocade or gold (ialcutla acceded with gold mylar bindiitg' and 'lining.. Oval heels. 4 to 10 M. I.7S Collection of famous - maker dresses in many styles to choose from. 6,5% checked," l3acron® polyester and 35% cotton blends, acetate jerseys, rayorl crepes, 100% Dacron^'!^ prints, bonded cottons and rayon knits. Black, navy pastels. 14V2-2W2. Compare at 6.99 5 Lace, Flower Trims, Novelty Stylings LADIES' , GOWNS AND SJLIPS 4 Days Only! Charge It. Waltz and long-length gowns featuring empire waist, all-over laces, trims, applique inserts. White and pastels. S-M-h. , ■ GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD '' aJliIII—^L., 'll -X , 41. ■,', i" ' l*(^NTIA(: PHKSS. Wl'/DNKSDAV. MAV>. I1M15, A 17 HAND MIXERS PERCOLATORS ELEaRIC FRYPANS CAN OPENERS A. (fK porliihlr iiiix' nr willi rliroiiin I»IiiIimI hnilri'A iiiul (»’ conlnt'l. 4 »lnyii! B. Siiiiliriini inixnr wilh liirgn hculrm, liancly hcri lre»t, i>rHlnr rjnrtor. 9.88 Rcfj;. 11.77 8.44 Heg., 9.97 A. Ilnixfi-Mil t-IU <■111> r(>('(riMiink<*r. UroiKlaiiiliiiitin. 4 l.V' 'IVriiiii " loiili'il fiApaii for no slii'k” l•ookilln. lligli <|oin<‘ covi'l', ^■pallllil iiirliiiint. B. |{r(i. l.").HK! Dominion 11” ImiITiM IVy hkillrl liiiM it'/i- heat positions, newly styled cup for more even drying. White zipper model case. 13.88 CLEANERS, POLISHERS 28.88 A. Sunbeam rug cleaner and floor conditioner. Not ex- Charae If actly as pictured. ^narge it B. Sunbeam Touch ’n’ Go”'quick pickup vacuum cleaner weighs only 5 lbs. Reg. 19.88 18.84 A. Sunbeam lightweight vaciinm.. Not exactly as pictured. B. GE Swivel lop vacuum cibaner has easy-roll wheels, atr tachments. . Reg;. 29.88 2784 Reg. 29.88 KITCHEN AIDS A. Reg. 6.84! Reliable fryer-cooker of heavy-gauge aluminum ... family size ^ cooker that roasts and stews. ’ B. Reg. 27.88! GE Toast-R-Oven is chrome jjt ' g80gg plated. See-thrii picture window, toasting^^^^|^j|^^^|J^^jj^ FINE RADIOS -A.. Reg. 16.95 RCA ■ AM/Tahle Radio. Smartly styled. Not exactly as pictured. 15.95 I and baking guides. C. Reg. 29.87! Handy Oster blender with 2-speed motor. Features !>-cup jar Add-A-Cap” cover. 4 days only! Save! w B. Reg. 8.88! Six-transistor AM radi^ with 88gg 2” magnetic speaker, high impact case in black and silver^j^4-day. Sale! ^ C. Reg. 19.77! Wake to music or alarm buzzer'with this handsome white clock radio. 4” Dynapower speaker. 4 days. 16.88 GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD A—IS 'IHE PONTIAC i4.kss, WKl)NKS1)AY, MAr fi, iDOrt 'World Conquest Russian Space Aim WASHINCJTON (UI‘I) IX? U.S. outlays of |7 billion a year, Russia still leads this No Trip Abroad for U.S. Cadets Defense Dept. Cites Balance of Payments ' W'ASIIINC.TON (AIM ~ About 2,8(K) cadets and midshipmen of tlie llirw major armed service ac'ademles will have to do without ll)<‘ IjioadeniuK infiuenci' of foreijtn travel tliis year and lext. The Defense Department disclosed l(xlay that summer training duty abroad has been called off for West Point and Air For(‘e Acadt'my cadets and f(^r An napolis midshipmen The reason; “a continuing nnfavorai)le international balance of i)ayment8 ” In btlier words, the future officers would spend dollars in foreign cduntries and ttius would aggravate the outflow of U.S. gold. RKSTIUCTKI) TRAININt; Affected are about 1,700 Naval Academy 1st and 3rd cla.ssmcn, .some 600 West Point 1st and 2nd classmen and about 500 2nd chessmen at the Air Force Academy. “The midshipmen summer training crui.ses will be restricted to operational training and visits to U.S. ports,” ttie Navy .said. Canceled were special midshipmen cruises to the Mediterranean, the western Pacific, the arctic area and two cruises with antisubmarine warfare hunter-killer groups in the Atlantic. The midshipmen affected will be reassigned to expanded Atlantic and Pacific training operations which will keep them out of foreign ports. 30-DAY TOURS Since the summer of 1960, the Army has sent West Point cadets for 30-day duty tours with \ the U.S. 7th Army in Germany. There, they have served as platoon commanders with regu-1» infantry, artillery and armor \s, the Army said. In «lace of the trips to Ger-many\ the Army said, the cadets wiil^ sent to Hawaii, Alaska, the Panama Canal Zone and to Army t^nits in the continental United Air Fore'e Academy cadets have participated in what was called “over^as field study” each summer ^nce 1959. These trips aVeraged about 2’^ weeks and tooic the air cadets chiefly to Eur^e, the Far East and South Am( To substitute for this, the Air Force'is extending whm it calls its 3rd lieutenant mogram, much like the Army’s program in Germany, in which the have been assigned to tional Air Force groups. Woman Getl Surprise; Weight Is 9Vi Stone SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (UPI) -When Mrs. Dohald Ross stepped gingerly on her new scale during the weekend she got the surprise of her life. She discovered she weighed 9M> stone: Employes of a trading" stamp store, where Mrs. Ross obtained the scale, said it obviously was intended for the British market. They exchanged her scale for one calibrated in pounds. A stone is 14 pounds. New evidence that^a form of hardening of- the aperies may be caused by the incessant burnping of the blood against blood vessel walls has been reported by medical researchers. “I USED TO CRY FOR NO REASON RTAU7 One Of tbt first ehaH|e*oL^ife dMfor signals No wonder a woman feels like crying! SufToeating hot flashes one minute; cold, clammy perspiration the next can set' nerves on edge, fill her with fear! Now, proven help! In doetora' tests, Lydia E. Pinkham.U1bbIets gavi remarkable relief from mid-life hot ' flashes and nervous tensions to woman after woman! Yes, jPInkhamls dramatically, quick-lymileved woman's burden of mfflMiat during the "change." ^ Idmous. gentle Lydia E. Hiblets, today. i'(mi|lry In the space race, and according to hixu-c (liti?clor Jamc.s E Wchb, Ritssia’s aim in .space is world domination. Wchb said the United Slales has |)ro|)0!i«Hl coo|iciativc space vcnIurcH, lail llic KiiNsians "in this held a.** in many olhcrs . . . have |)ccn compellliirs ami have b(?cn itccking .some means lo gain power over us and llic means to furlhcr llicir Intcrcsls In doininatiiig the world." Webb compared the U.S. and Soviet space programs and goals in closcd;door'-lesli-iiioiiy taken by a house Ap-propriaUoiis s u It c o iii in 11 -Icr lust iiioiilli mid made piib-lli- liMlay. He said thin couniry's Apollo or tiKMiii^shot program Ts two years hchlml schedule, lie hlamcil budget cuts for the delay. But ho said there still is hope the Uiiiled States can put men on the moon by (he end of the decade, as phiiined. .STEADY CUMD Weill) said space outlays by this ciiuiitry have been climbing steadily to a total of more than p hlllloti projeeterl fur the 12 moMtliM starting July 1. Of this, the space agency he heads will spend about $5.2 billion, with the rest allotted to the Defense Department and other agencies. , Over three million Inventions have been granted patents by the U.S, Patent Office since It was started in 1790 Johnion to Attond Dedication of Dam i|eR, Tex lollinNon is JASI' dent J( Tex. (AP) PresI expected to turn Sam Rayburn Dam, named for the late House speaker. Johnson was a closh friend and protege of Rayburn. Ceremonies starting at 10:80 a.m. will tie held at a site off farm roa«l 255 near here. The multlpur(xise dam will Ifhpound the largest rnuiHtiade lake In Texas. • JUNK CARS I WANTED ! USED AUTO PARTS FOR SALE FE 2-0200 YOU CAN *CHAR6i It AT YOUR NIARRY K-mart AUTO CENTER OPEN DAILY 10 to 10 , , SUNDAY 12 to 7 fe. “YOU JUST CAX’T BEAT OUR FULL 4 PLY PRICES” AINNIOVEO SUPER BUYS FRO^f Oi l! AUTO CEXTFR MONEY DOWN CretliC Plan ANY SIZE LISTED 6.00 X 13 5.0 X 15 Whitewalli ilightly higher 90 ANY SIZE LISTED 0.50 X 13 5.30 X 13 Whituwollu uilghtly higher ||90 tuhnlm, phi* ANY SIZE LISTED 7.50 X 14 6.70 X 15 7.00 X 13 7.10 X 15 Whitewalls slightly highei Hliickwdlls, liilx’ldis, jilus tiix (IikI the old tire off ANY SIZE LISTED 7.00x14 6.00x14 8.50 X 14 8.00x15 7.60x15 Whitewalls slightly higher |St90 tar and (he old lire oif FISK TRUCK TIRE 6-PLY RATED 100% NYLON TIRES , 13»» 1 7.95' 6.50 X 16 7.00 X 15 1 S.OS’* Blackwalls, tube type plus tax. FISK WINDSOR 100% NYLON ECONOMY TIRES 6.70x15 88 7* bUckwills, tube type plus Ux and the old tire'off your cur. 7,50, X 14 8®® , tub^ ' ^ hit, plus test dm the old tire off your «r. FISK TRIPLK GUARAJ^TEE 1. Guaranteed against oil rc Guaranteed against oil road hazards 2. Complete workmanship and material guarantee 3. Your satisfaction guaranteed or your money back Our tires are guaranteed for the lifetime of the original tread against blowouts, cuts, impocts, etc.; punctures, abuse and consequential damage excepted. Also against. defects in workmanship and materials without limit as to time for mileage, based on service rendered at regular retail price. Tac*hoineter Precision i engineered ^rugged and reliable to \ know your ___ \ engine's performance at all times. Extrbmcriy accurate for ^11 6 and 8 cyl. cars. # STIOO We Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities Hazard and Warniafjf Swlteh Converts parking lights and ,tail lights into flashing MUFFLERS 3-iiv-l Front End dob FAST FREE r low price Chorg# if! No Money Down 1. Wheel Alignment Adiuit eoilcr and camb«r; itt to«-!n vRJ29JL ond toe-out, inipeel ileering , 2. Wheel Baiaiice 3. Brake Adjustment Adjust broke shoei, tcit brokei, )n-tpeet broke lining, inspect hydraulic 8 88 'Washable, cool, good looking terry cloth throw, covert for perfect A 8ft protection. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD ■ ..i.-r / • ' , ."r ' • ' THI^PONTIAf I’11K«S, VVKDNKSDAV. MAV rt, IlMJ/i A--10 Up to 100 Unpubikhed Sbngs Found in Cole Porter's Files . NKW YORK (Al*) Ih^twcen 't$ and IIMI uiipiiltllHliad aoiigli V^illen by (‘ol« I’orler have iMtcn found In the late eompoS' (jr's files. The Util Includes such tales as "Bertie and Gertie," "Oik'/y Baby," and "He Certainly Kills the Women," porter, who died lust OHoher III the nge of Tl, was such a prolific HChappell & Co. music I the late composer’s Waldorf Brief Strike Staged in Louisiana Prison ANGOLA, l-a. (AP) Someidy, They made some threats to NK) inmates of the Imilslana tear the cannery up” Stale I'rlson Htagrsl a brief The prisoners’ biggest coin-strike Tuesday. - plaint, said Allgood, was the "The men clianted a little lack of a prison physician. The bit," said Warden Wayne All- prison; the warden says, Is gisHl," “but weren’t really row-1 trying to get a resident doctor Towers apartment Inst Decein-her, JnnUaiy uihI Pebruary. KIT KOU STAGK Sirmay said that John Whar- j ton, Porter's attorney for 20' years, had asked him to exam-ine ihe material. "They are In the style of Cole Porter, all fit lor Ihe Sloge," j said HIrmay, Wharton said llial at Ihe present he liad no plans for Ihe unpublished works cxce|it to find out more alxiul them by i sitting^ down and listening to Lllicm played and syng As for long range possibilities, he said: "Someone may offer to do a new show. They may la> addl'd to' a revival or slpgle sorigs recorded from them," LITTI E-KNOWN SONGS Wharton suggested that some might la« use^l In a revue along tlie lines of a curieilt olf Broad way lilt entllleil, "The Decline ami Pull of till! Kniire World us Seen 'llirough tlie K.yes of Cole Porter, Itevlslted” The show Is composeil of little known, pub llshed Porter songs A revival of liu* 10411 Porter inUNlcal, "Kiss Me Kale," opens at tlie City Ceiiler nexi Wedne^ day Porter, wlio wrote sucli lilts a "Just One of Those Things," "Niglit and Day," and "Begin (he flegiiine,” was known for his limiiicy meliMlies willi.lyrics llial were iiiiiane or witty, and melo dle.s willi a liroiHlIng finality, Work on Ihe conMirucllon of one of the loligesl road tunnels In the world, coiinei ling Italy niul l'’rani e, Is scheduled to slarl next spring. NEW! REDUCE 'lAYcilidLOSI ^UP T0 6LB8.AWEEK CAPSULbb! Eakicr to tak* andmoia etfectiva than th* powderad *nd Hq* uid food supplement, end costs less includino Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie.' Physician, M D No Gasliitis or Irrfoulaiity with Medic-Way caps. DQNm Dlti JUSI EAI' As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP It OFF! MEDIC-VYAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 YMKEE'S mSMIllllTE SIFl SINESIIIIIS Ell MITIEIIUY OR, MOTHER MAY LIKE A YANKEE GIFT CERTIFICATE IN DENOMINATIONS of ^5 to ^25 SHIM WinE SUE UYS FAMOUS NAME APPLIANCES HAND . TOWELS + WASHCLOTHS CMNMI QIULITY BATH TOWELS _ $ 4.0.M Mix or match bold ttripai or solid color*. 100% thick cot-; ton tarry. 24x46 Use inside or outside tha bath tub or showar. Lqrgo^ 18x24’’ colorfully daebrat-•d foam rubber inat it practical and decorative; at the same time. IN IHINTIAC...MIRACLE MILE SH0PPIN6 CENTER ARC PERRY AT MONTCALM-NIGHTS to 9, SUNDAYS to 7 Presenting the Go Everywhere" Ciella Dress by; SACONY TAU. OR SHORT, WE HAVE i-;. YOUR SIZE IN iSEAMPRiUFE * A PETTICOATS AND SLIPS WITH SHADOW PANELS ALL AROUt'JD. EACH ^4 1 J ‘ ■ A. Sondia petticoat m nylon tricit, Average In white, small, to extra huge. B: Linnet slip in Kodel^ polyester, nylon, cotton blend. Average in white, sizes 32 to 44. Tall in white, 34 to 40. Short in white, sizes 32 to 40. C Robin slip in drip-dry cotton batiste. Averoge in white, black, sizes 32 to 44. Short in white, sizes 32 to 40. D. Sonata slip in nylon tricot. Average in white and black. Sizes 32 to 42. , Tall, while, 34 to 40. Short, white, 32te 38. . E. Narcissus petticoat in Kodel polyester, nylon ond cotton bteird. Average in while, small, medium, large, exlro largi Use A Lion Charge Plan yvith option terms .1' , ^ I , '1: U‘ i V t'v,. '.S WKDNIfiSnAV, MAV H, 100/5 ' FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS I ma Hlghlynd Read I I2ia lildwiH Avt.J llllCoaltyUktHd.l |ui iMktktw R««tf I OWN IIIWOAV^ I OWN ll(WB*yi •all: 1 These are but a few of our outstanding values on National Brand Name Foods plus everyday ---vrii levaiiviivil wivailU I1UMK3 I W/'® /eryday low prices and free Gold Bell Gift stamps! M 11 ................... h ifioi’/iw' iml fms !i MW% ' Hygrade's C 1 WITH COUPON BELOW BOILED HAM (ft. HYGRADE'S _ . BOILED 89^ HAM 'lb. Limit 1 Pound Hygrade's SMOKED PICNICS » Sun , Moy <>, 1965 ' Special Only! With Coupon and ’S"" Purchase' tidT JSf., 'zSF Regular Size i ib. s oz. Festival Pore Strawberry P''®®®”®* 2 Pound Eckrich JIFFY JOES QAI F nAYC Wednesday, May 5 thru OHLC UHIO Sunday, May 9,1965 H?! toy .|otTp' TIDE BOX 59’ Jar 10 oz. Package POBiS&s 19' 1 Pound 13 0z*Can First Quality Colura NYLOMS RATH SLICED BACON 3 Pair Package 99' 69: Beef Liver &ANQUE1 POT PIES • Chicken • Turkey • BeeP Soz “IgC Un- ^Jasi $-|79 I Beef Shanks 39 OIL I "S" lb. : Wangners Low Calorie } iORAlfCE DRINK 39' .1 Quart (■ 22 oz. HART TOMATO JUICE 19 C I duort ml All Purpose Grind chase & SANBORN COFFEE $ 5 Pound tymi,.Bag LORIDA ORANGES MEL-O-CRUST BREAD SALE! With Above Coupon . and *5“ Purchase > WHITE BREAD 1 pound 4 oz. lent • WHEAT BREAD 1 Pound Loaf • RYE BREAD • CRACKED WHEAT YOUR 1 Pound Loaf 1 Pound Loaf CHOICE! • HAMBURGER BUNS • HOT DOG BUNS Paekage of 8 Packogo of 8 3 Pound Can ! tm Im Food Town-Peoplo’t ionue Stamp Coupon lEfl FREE GOLD BELL ^‘ wU Stamps With Purchase pf any pound bag of POTATO CHIPS Food Tdwn-Peopto»» Bowui Stndip Coupon Food Town-Peoplo’e Bonije Stamp Coupon Food Town-Peoplo*$, Bonue ftamp Coupon M FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase pf any 3 heads of LETTUCE MFREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase/ of a*ky 2 packages of ^ COOKIES *Xi MFREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase. of any 3 lbs. of HAMBURGER >n< Non* sold to doalort ei Food Town-Poeple’s Bonus Staipp Coupon MFREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase Hi: : ' of any BEEF ROAST '■t-J to ^2 TIIK I’ONTIAC ]*HI.SS, VWDNKSOAV. MaV li, Women Who Work and Keep House Usually Make Use of Convenience Foods thli couii^ an on tiM ru|i (rom Uittr )ob» to Um Utohin ■ftor flri o'clook tvory ov«-ninf. That they can acoompliih thia fact, not only (or UianualvM, their families, or their gueata, Cruaty Styl® Dip each linmbiiritcr |mtly In flour that lifiH Ihuui Hcaaoned with aalt and pepiwr l)cforc frying If you want a crusty hamburger. ' la dua to itha fact thai they have leariH^m to malu^ tlu^ nuwt of convenience foodi^ Our atterllva cooks arc pa at maatera at planning ahead and iialni recipes which allow pra*preparatlon. Confident, imaginative, adventuresome and inventive, they ever On the hsikout for ttomethl^ng gtato salad, add pickle relish Instead of pickles. It saves chopping the pickles and tastes Just ns good. Hurry-Up Chicken 'Casserolelles 0 slices enriched biHsad toast 1 (5W ounce) Jar or % cup coarsley chopped, cooked chicken i (lO'/i ounce) can condensed cream of chicken soup m tablei/pqons Sherry 2% tablespoons grated Bleu (dieesb Trim crusts from toast; cut 4 slices In half, diagonally and 2 siloes In half, vertically. Place a toast oblong In the center of each individual casserole with a toast triqngle on each side, Uie |M)lnts resting against the top edge of the caaaerole. Arrange 3 (nblespoims chopped chicken on each toast oblong. Beat undiluted soup Eat the Cups, Too Por something different for your child‘8 next party, make edible candy or nut cups. Mix up your favorite popc(»rn hall reeutcn ^<1 eup milk ^ tk teaspmin pepixtr ti teaspoon ssit Ml cup grated Swiss cheese Brush butler on liOlli sides of each breiid alloe, and trim crusts. Gently press each slice of bread dbwn Into a custard cup to form a bread cup. Press a slice of Canadian becon Into each bread (Hip^ Combine beaten eggs, milk, pepper, salt and cheese. Pour egg mixture Into bread cups, using about Mi cup (or each Serving. Place custard cups In a shal- low pan and bake In a moderatn oven (8S0 degraas) (or abcMit twenty-five minutes, or until egg mixture Is sat. Remove from custard' oup , to serve. Yield; 6 servings. H^lpi Fr®« AAold Gelatin will unmold perfectly mow wl If you wipe the mold with damp cloth and sprinkle lightly with sugar before pouring In the cooled gelatin. When sat, the gelatin will unmold without dipping the mold in hot water. There will be no trace of auger. FLOODS Ghamie toheker, anil ..., m STAMPS NO GIMMICKS JUST LOW PRICESl .1 "r r twri u-A* L . .':i t i '■■'Ur:'. 1 I' TIIK l»()NTIAC rUKH.S. WPJ)NKSI)AV. MAV fl. Ift05 Breakfast Bar Prevents Confusion Set up a breukfatit bur every niglit before you retire end you’ll avoid early tnornlug eoii-futdon and bad temiau N; Use brightly coIoi'er cups with an assortment of favorite jams, cover, and put on tlie bur along with cereal boxes and sugar. Kill coffe«» jwt. ready to plug in, and be sure the toasU^r is In its regular place. F^lace milk and fruit Juices in an accessible s|M>t near the front of the reffigeratta- for easier self-service. Simple Dressing Mix olive oil, tarragon vinegar, salt, white pepper and paprika in amounts to suit your own taste for salad dressing. Use for a salad of crisp greens, orange slices and paper-thin red onion rings. Company dessert: Coffee-flavor^ Mavariun Cream served with Chocolate Sauce. Muffin Tin Holds Cups lie different |iiid serve your IctHi lirinks with a flair |n gaily patterned or cool pastel-colored paper cold drink cups — chosen to complement your decor, your dress, or your mood of the mo ineiit Bet drinks Into the cups of a do-it-yourself muffin tin tray (one for ‘^-inch muffins) which has been liund or spray-painted, (lc(*orated witli coioiful plastic tupc!8 or spangles, or with any gn tliat suits your arUstlc faiu;y. 'llie paper cups full of your favorite lutverago are solidly andiortsd, so that even young liands can pass the tray witliout spilling. Chicken Patties Diced cooked chicken and mashed potatoes are a thrifty and delicicMis I'ombination. To piake cliickeii cro<|uettes, com Idiie 2 cups eacli diced ckeepper to taste. Korrn into patties and saute’ until brown. Makes four servings. Diced Chicken Has Miiltitude. of Uses DIcimI cooked cliicken adds an elegant note to n variety of dislies, states (lie National Itroil er (,'outicil. Kor appell/.ers, fill mushroom caps with tlic chicken .seasoned to taste, sprinkle with bread criunbs, pop under broiler. Add diced cooked chicken and a pinch of curry to cold canoed vichysoisse. Kill avocado lialves with diced (;s in. Tw»-t’heese Scrambled Kggs < eggs '/4 teasjHion salt , Dasli of wiute |>ep|)er 1 'A talilespoons lilitler Vi cup cream style collage ciioese 2 lables|HK>n.s finely diced cited dnr clieese liudi skillet. Add eggs and tsatk over riimiernlely low heat, stirring often, until almost set. Quickly stir In cheese. Serve at once. Makes 2 servings. f’inoappid Topping Puts Gold Glaze on Dessert Itcat eggs slightly with salt and pepper. Melt butter in an 8- Ptncapplc topping is the best of all to spread over baked cooled cheese cake. f!oiiibitie 1 (8% (iiince) can crushed pinen|>ple, % cup each sugar and pineapple Juice and :i talilespoons cornstarch. Stir ov<>r iiKKlerate heat imlll ttiick. UIcikI In I iMUiten egg mid I tatilespoon butter. Cook few minut(‘s more, then cikiI. Thick Sunday Souoi Just Full of Railing Uaisln bultcracotch aundaa sauce Is made to order for stTumplIous NiUKlues. CiHik I cup each sugar iiihI corn syrup over low heal until sugar dissolves. Add V« cup butter, (4 teaspoon salt, ^ teaspoon maple flavoring and I cup whipping cream. Cook until thick, ahoiil 21) iiiiimies, ilien add % cup cliopped dark seedless raisins; < more rniniiles. Cool, Nice for lunch: cream of to-nuilo .soup servtMl with liver-wurst sandwiches and crisp carrot and celery slicks. Sm h Sham! LAST WEEK OVER 100,000 CUSTOMERS SHOPPED AND SAVED AT PACKER! JOIN THE BIG SWITCH TO SAVINGS! CHANGE TO PACKER! 5060 PIXIE HWY. NORTH OF WALtON BLVD. 700 PONTIAC TRAli: At MAPIfE ROAp^WALLED LAKE 1855 WOODWARD AT 14 MILE—BIRMINGHAM IIIK rON'HAr I'HKSS. WKDNKSDAV. MAY ft-llMl.) Cheese, Meat Encase Pickles for Snacks In KMORnlllon of nil youiiK |M>o|)lc who onjov online; |)li-kh*K HN NmirkH, Iho |)i('kh‘ piukorf* h«vr dovlsinf a cli'vor now way lo Horvo fiilj plfkh's and kwooI Rhorkin.s. Whole pickles are cnni|)lelely hidden in a coalini^ of cheddar clieeso, llioti rolled in cliop|»ed peaniilK (Old served ofi a w4 cu|» finely choppisl salteil jieanufs r)ry gherkins on paper towels^ Mix togefh^r cheese and mayonnaise. Shape a sixth of the mixture around each gherkin, roH in nuts, ('hill Servy on pop side sticks or woOrleu skewers fiom llie hutclier, Makes (i m*rv-iiigs, ■ lain Fickle Pickles (i sweet gherkins 1 package (II ounces) cieain . -cliee.se^ softened ' ( pound ground, cooked luim S|>rinkle Pinttdppb Wine Punch Should Mellow q Bit I low 24 hiriira. Add 1 (l-(}uarl.) IXfttle aiprkliliil wafer jual be-I fore Nerving. Makes liO servings. FICKI.K PICKI.KS - Sweet gherkins are lurking jnside the Cheddar cheese and peanut coating, and also inside the cream cheese and ground ham disguise; and just lo shoW that pickles go with all kinds of food, juicy dills are inside the broiled ground beef These Fickle Pickles are all served on wooden slicks for easy handling and eating. Jrfiww's-, COM/FfO-/,.. %hWSinjn Ibri Cleaner yonpe been wailing Im Ym —<• Jif(«m s due f^arrive! Jifoam . . . that •mazing 5-Minute Ov^ Cleaner that cleans the toughest, baked-on own grime and grease in five $hort nmute$! Jifoam . . . the Oven Cleaner that needs NO acouring.. . NO draping . .. NO neutralizing . ,. NO nibbeit gloves! Jiloamls the Ovtui Cleaner you’ve hem waiting for it,.. It’s ' B Coming Soon! il’V ■T'.’. I""™..... ""'T Tea Sandwiches em;li side with sail, |)Cpper mul punch Is elogmil, not too swoct - (iiiKin powder lo laslo, llroll 4 hlend especially created fpr I lively lor lea; gel an ini' showers, liridge and eluh re- «'**«*• "f •'»'|"dwicli bread, freshmenis. rraekers or <-o<‘ktail picks ; around each pickle. Makes it Hi'rvings lliirgei l lekle Ptekle (i,(lill pickles I inehes Irom heal source, ft min- I pound ground heef ^iles on ench side, or iiiilil de Sail and pepper ! sired degree of doneness. w w w Onpm'powder 1 ,Serve on popsicle slicks or , ,, , , Tomalo ciilchiip i wooden skewers from the biilch ' ‘ oiihine 1 (46mince) |)i( kles on paper lowels, | ei, for easy dunking in eidclnip i pineapple juice and Shape sixth ol llie meal | Makes I'lvings. Upiarti boltle Hmderne; let mcF I wheels. then trim away the crusts; slic It horizontally and spread with a cheese sandwich filling. Roll Ihe long slices and chill, At , .serving lime, (>ut into smniLpiii Dry gherkins on paper lowels .^hnpe a sixth ol llie elu'ese around eacli gherkin, mil in ground li.un Cliill Serve on popsicle.slicks or woislen skew ers from the Inilcher Note lor more daiuly bile I si/.e snacks cul oil end.s ol gher -And goiKl lo cal’.' Naturally! | ,,,^1 Cheddar Fickle Pickles j around Ihcjii leaving end.s un- j li sweet gherkins covered Moll in ham; ehill. Cut [ :i cups finely grated ' in 1 inch slices to serve >on : FREE!-Beef.,, HindOtr. WATCH NEXT WEEK’S AD! ''’i ‘ L* , , l / rilK PONTIAC! PRKSS. WKOI^RSOAV, MAY iJ, lOfl/i V Cake Mixes, Frostings Lead List Hot Hors d'Oeuvres Ily JANKT OI)KM. i'onlliir l*rfNB FoikI Kdllor II’h 1)0(111 Homo Umo Hlnco wo dlHCUHRcd now produotR. Thoy’vo been appcurin(; at thfiir usual rapid rate. There are two new cake mixes that are Intoi eslltig and two frostlnuR. One of the cakes has a doli-catc almond flavor, The froslluK 8U|t«OHto(l for It Is also a mix; U Is a noiiKat typo In olllior ohooolato or vanilla, TWO 8TYLKS Tho second cake I.h a douhio f (‘ a t u r (', Named "Tropical Mi.sl," it comes as an^el bssl or layer cake mix. Tho fliivor Is a combination of lemon, orange and vanilla. any left over, store |l In the refrlKerntor. Here's a convindence fotsl you can Keep on hand all the time. Have yon s(‘on the now packages of cereal that have freeze-dried fruit in them? Strawl^er-ries or bananas are the two fruits chosen for lliese new packages. h’reezo dried fo(H| retains a groat deal more flavor aial color than dehydrated fcxHl. Kor years, w)i've eaten dev-lleH ham spread from cans. Now the same company that makes the ham spread Is making a chicken spread. You’ll find it has many uses. Some .stores are slocking fro zen /'orn sticks and frozen cinnamon twists, liolh are pre baked and neeil only to la* |s)pp)*d Into the toaster for a ()uick healing. INSTANT MAIUNADK Another new mix is an instant meat marinade. All you do Is add water, pour the ndxlure over the meat and wait Ifi min utes, then C)K»k. One luickage rnarlnaU's up to four pounds of Small - size pastry tiirnoverR made witli cheese or fish excellent hors d'oevre. Thf^ them on foil a may he p r e pare d uluuul, erate oveti. wrapped appropriately and atored In refrlgeraM Of trmor. When you tako lurnovera Out of (heir atOrage plaoe, put meat. IM)ITO|lN t;i.OWN This clown Is made of iMi|H'urn sauced with a slmple-lo-make corn syrup mixture. The happy face la created with licorice strings, Jelly rings dnd gumdrops. Some of the syrup Is tinted with fO(sl coloring to add an authentic circus look to the clown. One hint here is to use the f(S)d coloring 'in liberal amounts, as the stark white of the popcorn tends to lighten the effect of the color considerably. We’ve had samples at the office of the new canned fr<»sl-ing. OhiM'olatei vanilla or lem-on-fluvor(‘d. It Is all ready to spread on the cake. If there is Breakfast Drink Highly Nutritious Fruit Whip Is a Fluffy Dessert A breeze to piit together, at tractive fluffy, pretty light pink In color and rewarding to the taste buds, “Flouncy Fruit Whip’’ is a .spring-time dessert delight. The flavor combination of pink grapefruit gelatin, canned fruit cocktail, prunes, lemon juice and sour cream Is as refreshing las you please. Flouncy Fruit Whip 1 package (.1 oz.) pink grapefruit gelatin 1 cSip boiling water ' Ml cup cold water 1 tablespcxm lemon Jidce 1 (’an (1 lb. 1 oz.) fruit cocktail 1 cup cooked prunes Vi cup dairy sour cream Dissolve gelatin in boiling' water. Stir in cold water and lemon juice. Chill until mixture mounds on spoon. Meanwhile, drain fruit cock-tall.' Cut prunes into pieces. Beat gelatin until fluffy and doubled in volume; fold In prunes, fruit cocktail and sour cream. Turn into 6 or 7 dessert dishes, chill if you wish. Makes 6 or 7 servings. Canned Meat Prepared Like Sauerbrafeh Old-fashioned sauerbraten recipes call for marinating beef in vinegar and spices for five days. Here is a sweet-sour braten recipe that takes only a few minutes to prepare, yet makes an excellent menu feature for luncheons and suppers. Not only Is it easy to prepare, but it alk) is economical, try this delicious recipe the next time you have to whip up a quick, different meal, SWeet-Sour Braten 1 can condensed beef bouillon (undiluted) 4 gingersnap cookies (each about 2 inches in diameter), crumbled cup seedless raisins 2 tablespoons brown sugar 2 tablespoons vinegar 2 12-ounce cans chopped beef or luncheon meat Combine all Ingredients, except meat, in large frying pan. Simmer 2 minutes, or until thickened, stirring often. Cut each loaf of meat into 4 slices. Place slices in sauce | turning once. X Simmer, covered, 5 minpt^, or until meat is thoroug^J^eat-ed. Serve with butter^i^noodles. -Yield: 4 servings. It's a Popcorn Clown j Yam Puree Contains DiceiJ Cooked Ham Nothing could be more exciting than to have a smiling, candy-faced popcorn clown like this orifc come visiting your next party for the .small-fry. He’s as gay a party partner as you’ll find anywhere and he’s (*dible, too! This jolly clown would be a delightful surprise centerpiece at a birthday party or could help to add a festive air to your sion" of staying home while an older brother or sister gcnis off to play camp or ort a .scout hike. Ice cream sundaes and lemon ade fini.shed off with a handful of cookies per each guest will help to add a fesitve air to your party and, of course, once the celebrating is over, the clown himself will make quite tasty nibbling. one inch When popcorn is firm, remove from pans. Roll gumdrops and cut to make a mouth; use large gumdrop for nose; jelly rings for eyes, and cut Heorlee stick and shape Into eyebrows. Cut popcorn in 9-lnch pan diagonally in half to make two triangles. Form hat by curving 9-inch uncut edge of one to fit head. Cut remaining triangle in half; trim to make bow tie. Secure hat. colorc'd balls and bow (ie to clown h(*ad with toothpicks. Yams and ham make a rich, thick .soup that's almost a meal by Itself. Show folks who want to stay , streamlined but well-nourished I are partial to this type of pola-' lion Here is a New York rcslau-r.int .singer’s formula If you have lots of enter-tuhilng (H'cusions coming up III the near fulure, you may he lnlerest(*d In a delightful little booklet put out by the Taylor Wine Compaity. It's called "Sparkling Ho.spl-talllv" and Is a s<*quel (o one [)ublish<“d last fall, Send me your name and address on a postcard and I’ll i)asH them on to the Taylor |Miople who’ll send you tlie booklet Dagwood Sandwich Eaten With Fork Cook and peel 4 medium yams. Puree in food mill or electric blender. Mix puree with 3 tablespoons of butter, 1 teaspoon of salt, V* teaspoon of pepfair and V« teaspoon of onion powder. Cook over low heat, slowly adding 3 cufis of milk. Add pound of diced cooked ham. Simmer gently 10 minutes. Makes 0-0 servings. Cil Callagher’s Fast Breakfast 'Vi cup milk 1 large or 2 small scoops vanilla ice cream • 1 medium banana, sliced. 3 tablespoons wheal g(*rm 1 'tablesp(M)U honc'y 1 <'gg Turn all the Ingredients Into an electric blender. Blend until combined. As you drink this, stir occasionally to keep the wheat germ in suspension. Makes 1 serving. A high and handsome sand wich Ibal’s lop.s In flavor is a "Tower Sandwich” Made In layers and topped with a rich dres.s-iug; it's a ((liick and ea.sy mcal-Inone lunch or hurry-up fjire for guests. On a slice of rye bread, place a slice of cooked ham (som(»-times calh;d ‘‘bolh'd’’ ham) and a thick layer of lettuce. To|) with a slice of Swi.ss cheese, another slice of ham and more lettuce. Pour thousand Island dressing over all. You eat this one with a knife and fork. 'riiiil tllllc upiirrcl didn’l xcl hii) |)cp nod viliiluy lioin vilamin pillii nod ciipsulcH. Nor need you if you eiil KrclHchmct WiKNiKieim (vguluily.KM;(M.lunci Wlieal (ierm is a mUurat food. You’ll eryoy hs crisp, nutlike flavor. In all, it contiiins over .10 nutrients which nature has provided for go(Kl health, slaniinu and vigor Regular or ~ including many not found in vilamin Sugar ‘N Honag Mid mineral preparations, Kretschmer Wheat Germ is delicious as a cereal or used generously as a topping for oilier cereals. Look for it In the cereal section of your food store. Make it part of your breakfast every day. And a good morning to yout Let Turnips Cook for 10 Minutes P(ipc()rn Clown 2 cups sugar 1 '/i cups water ’/it cup corn syrup 1 teasptxin vinegar Ml teaspoon salt Green food ctiloring 5 quarts unsalted popped corn Colored sugar crystals Large gumdrops Jelly rings 1 licorice string Combine sugar, water, corn syrup, vinegar and salt in a heavy suacepan. Bring to a boil and cook over medium heat until mixture reaches 250 degrees on candy thermometer. Remove one cilp of hot syr-iip; add green food coloring and mix well; pour over 2 quarts popcorn and stir to coat. Press in buttered 9-inch square pan to a dibpth of one inch. Pour remaining syrup over 3 quarts popcorn. When well-coated, form 3 small balls, two inches in diameter; roll in colored sugar. Press remaining coated popcorn into buttered 10-inch springform pan to a depth of Try this Interesting way to give extra flavor to turnips. Helen’s Turnips I'/i pounds (6 medium) while turnips 'h cup water 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 teaspoon salt '/4 teaspoon sugar I tablespoon lemon juice '/4 cup minced parsley Pare turnips alK^ cut into W-inch cubes. In a 10-inch skillet, heat the water, butter, .salt and sugar; stir in turnips. Boil gently, covered, until turnips are tender — about 10 minutes; practically all the water should be evaporated. Stir in the lemon juice and parsley and reheat. Makes 6 servings. Use Ham, Too stretch that leftover turkey for sandwiches by adding thin slices of boiled ham; make the sandwiches as usual adding lettuce and mayonnaise spiked with lots of prepared mustard. Dept. 7L, P.O. Boston 10, Moss. 16, I redeemable at my Name (please prlnt)_ IMj Address_____________ ? City_ coupon. f clip thl9 for mol Surprise Lunch Eater With Sardine Treat Instead of the usual sandwich for the hungry man in your life, why not surprise him with a can of Maine Sardines, a. package of crackers and some onioii rings,, each wrapped in its own foil package? The tangy little fish ^ the crisp crackers make a delightful change froiri his usual • fiire. ■ , ”, " T Don’t forget to include a can Opener since Maine Sardines come in convenient keyless cans. 2 CANS FREE OFCHOICE CmT POODS Be sure your cat gets all the food she loves and needs, every day, from her own cup-boardftri of Tabby. There are five different kinds. Try any three and send us the labels for two cans free. A little pineapple leftover? Add it to a can of baked beans and heat. You can use pineapple tidbits or chunks or you can cut a pineapple ring into small pieces. tabby-ehoh9 foods for ohoosy-oats Another Million Stamp Winner At Food Fair! Mr. Robart Good* it another lucky winner In FoodTeir'i oicitinq (temp Green Sfampt, » Stemp^. He now hat Match the SAH Stamp*- at SSH Great^ Food Fair. It’i fun . . . It'i and you may win up to one million S&H Green Stamp). "TWie, UiftiL dazzling ONE LOW PRICE - NONE HIGHERI Center Cut Pork Chops cracked or whole wheat or Lady Linda Vienna Bread TOWN PKIOE CREAMY | u I OX M Smooth Peanut Butter' j** 49 CAMPBELL’S BRIGHT, FULL FLAVOR ' . jm , u tender Pork & Beans ^ FRANCO-AMERICAN ' jm n, Nourishing Spaghetti 4 'canY *1 ENHANCES ANY TABLE SETTING «o CT >909 Soft Charmin Napkins IQ' KEEPS HAIR LOOKING NATURAL |)OZ0#% Aqua Net Hair Spray can 59 .T^erje4l Quicle, LujtcJifis;: t Sup StscLfc AN ALL-TIME FAVORITE—MILO m Pincenning Cheese 59 FARM MAID ALL-PURPOSE 4909, Fresh Half & Half cV 39 SPREAD IT ON BREAD i ii CTM dO Allsweet Margarine 25 PLAIN OR PIMENTO KRAF Velveeta *79* Dough For y©(ii- §toMps ITALIAN, SALISBURY, CHICKEN. BEEF, TURKEY Banquet Dinners "sof30u CHICKEN, BEEF, TURKEY* E • OX O Ac Banquet Ment Pies 5 o9 APPLE OR CHERRY-LLOYD J. , ,, 4949, Hnrriss Fruit Pins 39 MORTON FROZEN A i LX 3m49* w SSH STAMPS POTATO CHIPS s 39* .J S3- ------------ 0«N”?O0(M) KIIAMIK, Yemen (AP) -The Yemeni [M'ace conference decided today to send delegates throughout the Arab world to ask for constructive ideas to hal^ the year old <-ivil war in Yemen. Most of the delegates to the eonfereiiee are sheikhs sup> porllng the repuhlleaii regime of President AIxtullah Al Sallal. Australia will s|>end $660 miF lion In the next five years on the development of Papug and New Guinea, Territories Minister Charles K, Rarnes announc’ed l(Mlay, This will be an Increase of $17.6 million over the current annual s|>en(llng rate. missing and 17 have been seriously injured In mountain climbing accidents since the "golden week” holiday began May 1. Police blamed the deaths <»n avalaiK-hes, bli//.ards, and unusual cold wave, and carelessness. CANHFItKA", Australia (AP) . TOKYO (AP) - Japanese |M)lice report»«l today that 50 |)crsons have b<‘cn killed, 5 are TOKYO (AP) - Communist (.'liltia sent a delegation of little-known, middle-rank politicians and military men to Moscow today for the 20th anniversary of the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany. The delegation was headed by IJn Feng, vice chairman of the standing (smimlttee of the National People’s Congress, and Deputy Defense Minister Maul Kuang Ta. Moscow today to attend the eel-. ebratlon of the 20th anniversary of the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany. Informed sources said Nasu-tioti would also Seek more arms and spore parts for the Indonesian armed forces. JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -• Indonesian Defense Minister Alxlul Haris Nnsution left for The Romans, Greeks, Phoenicians and Spanish at one time or another possessed the island of Capri. W ^ PRODUCT OF INTERNATIONAL SILVER J*00/ Sinless Flafwsire llir Qgf Dinner Knife This Week With Coupon! Velvet—All Flavors ICE CREAM Gaylord—Pure Creamery BUnER 4 Save 8c limit eat with coupon on opposlfe page Limit one with coupon on oppoilfo page Mb. Print Duplex, Chocolate or Vanilla Sandwich Cookies Golden Save 16c Brand dn 4 Mb. $' Pkgt. 1 12-ot. Corn Flakei, 5nock Puck, 614-ox. Special K , Save up to 16c on 4 Pillsbury Cream Style or Chicken Gravy Mix ’/2"OZ. I^C Pkg, lU Hygrade Beef Stew Cereal 49' ^ pki.. 1-lb. 8-oz. Can Toniato Sauce 10- Red Kettle Soups Chicken Noodle, Veoeteble with Noo 2-. . 39* Hygrade Vienna Sausages 5 5'/2-oz. $*|00 Cans I ELNA SALE! Pink Soothing 1 4 nr tw f)Q Pepto Bismol 3o7 Bonie • Cut Green Beans • Cream Com • Green Peas • Tomataaa Fresh Roll-on Deodorant 79^ 8 00 One Loaf of Bread Free When You Buy Two! FREE BREAD l-oaves Mel-O-Crust White Bread reen Sale Sweet Peas 6 *1®® Save 23c on 6 >Yhole kernel or | Cream Corn 7 ’ ca:;" *1®® ■«\ u Special Label Facial Soap Personal Ivory Save 3c 4-pack Pkg. Hunt't—Light Dessert Treat Fruit Cocktail .Save )5c on 5 I Cant Hunt's—Serve with Cottage Cheese Peaches Save 4c Mb. 13-02. Can Save 22c on 7 Mott's—Tangy Flavor \ Applesauce Save 24C; , on 4 I Ft. 9-0* I Jan 23’ $|«0 23* $|04 Breast O' Chicken TUNA Light Chunk Style Limit thru with coupon Save 22c 6V2-0*. M opposifs poge on 3 19 Banquet Frozen Varieties DINNERS-^ 3~’l ■ pi TB H wi. ■■ HBL P^r limit coupon i ' PPBP 11-0*. Pkgs. 00 8-01, Pkg. Borden'x Eogle Brand Neufchatel Cheese 200d, was out of the chamber on the telephone, Dzendzel said, however, that "If all Ihe (s>mmlttees worked like appropriations, we'd have no problems " That commlltee worki-d all last wis^k wluui Ihe Senahi was In recess. Dzendzel . said the slate affairs committee, with nearly 100 bills, was "Ihe big violator" in not moving faster. It.s chairman, Sen, William Romano, D Warren, was not at the capitol Toes day to answer Ihe crithdsm Unlike ^previous years, hills not acl(Ml upon this year will remain In committee for th(« IIHKI session of this Vltrd legislature, SAME DEADLINE 'ITie House, where few meas- ures pass wllhout ihorouglj d)^ hate^ Is suhje< l lo Ihe same (headlines ns the Senale, hut To Honor Dr. BorHett LANSING (API Dr, Lynn Haiilelt, reliring us .state superintendent of public Instruction, will he hononsi at a testlmonliol dinner June It at Ihe Lansing Civic Center, Bartlett Is leaving after eight years as state sup erhUendent to become depuly secretary of defense for educa Hon. slill lias as many as 1100 of Its 1,00’/ hills In coimnlttei^ « SiHuiker Joseph Kowalski Is making .sure none of Ihe bills emhiKlying Ihe 10(14 Democratic platform are drowned in last-minute flood of legislation expected |o come pouiing out of commillees, Gerald I*'a y e, admliiistra five as.slslanl for legislative llai •son, ha.s been .sent around lo comrnltled chairmen all Dem ocrals with a* list of lop prlorl-ly hills which Kowalski would like lo sc(< r(‘por|ed out. "The speaker Is only asking that these bills come out," Faye said. "As to the other Important legislation-be Is leaving tho choice up to the discretion of committee chairmen." Orators Meet at WSU DETIIOIT (AP) 'IV nation's lop college orators are scheduled to compete In the lllst annual Interstate Oratorical Coolest Thursday and Friday at Wayne Slate University. fCharms-^3^ Ham Slices Boiled Ham Ball Park Franks Armour Franks First of the Season - New Crop Red (Cevers 5,000 Sq. Ft.—Non Burning ALLADIN FERTILIZER .,20-10-5 Weed & Feed 10-6-4 $|99 $|99 $149 Bottle, 69‘ lO-oi: BOTTLE FOR CHILDREN'S BATH Soaky Liquid . With 12c Moiled in Coupon k. Bravo Floor Wax ’’-oz ^1°’ ....' . » „",'Can : Slii-oz. S'hoker Glass ■ . . ■ ' Durkee Minced Onion 39‘ Barlinka grapes ^ Large, dark, t from SoufI 39' Lo Calorie I-lb Dole Pineapple Sticed Chunk Maxwell -House 14-ox. Jar $100 . AAaxweR-House 14-ox. Jar INSTAMT COFFiE ’1 S9 1-lb. Pkg. Nobisco Cookies Bqronet Cremes p..49‘ 1-lb. Loat'Mel-O-Crust; ' ' • Whole Wheat Bread lOe Loaf ly 8-oz. Pkg, Tasty F.F.li. Pizza Cratkers p..29‘ I-lb. 7-02. Pkg, Form CresV Pineapple Pie ^oc 1-lb. in Gloss Percolatdr Pock . Maxwell Nouse Coffee $3.95 $199 Value 1 ' Good for Cooking ' * . Tobasco Hot Sauce Jar ) r' / ^ ^ U H { _ 'I 1IIK IH)NTIA(J iniKSH. WKlW)^Hi)AY/MA;V fi. Iimfl New School Building Becomes a Reality The New Pontiac School District Administration Building: A Honeycomb Of Light On The Doorstep Of Pontiac's Civic Center A year ago, il was just a dream. Today, the dream has been reinforced with steel and concrete and is the physical base for the Pontiac education system. Pictured on this page is the new school administration building located on the northeast corner of East Wide 'I'rack and Auburn. It is headquarters for the administrative staff of the school district. In addition, the hexagohal building houses the meeting chambers fojr the Board of Education. f As ils unusual exterior would indicate, the new structure is the last word in contemporary design. ★ ★ Erom the abstract art in the lobby to the multicolor chairs in the board chambers, brightness is the theme of the building. , The .school administration building, adjacent to city hall, takes its place as the fourth structure in the city’s civic center complex. ( ... Small Library Is Housed In New Administration Building Conference Rooms Adjoin Offices Numerous Windows Brighten Outer Offices Modern Art And Florq^ Highlight Spacious Lobby Partitions^ Divide Office Areas M f f HE TON I IA(V WKIVNKSI)AV/1\IAV 5, IU(15 ofhrifty Shoppers Save ^otk Ways at Tlationa oLow (Prices pips valuable PColden (Ped Stamps! With Coupon B9I0W, and l^urchasa af $5.00 or More U4i.A. CliiW Ifif* Vilw* Way TrlMiiad Swiss Steak 2:. I Cu» eh,«fc fresh fryer “ S B A. Cholc# BMf, Vol«. 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Radaam this coupon at National ; Slerai. Coupon Expirat Sat., May l { L FREE WITH THIS COUPON I 50 EXTRA «S^g‘''STAMPS ; With Purchata ot a bo-ST of 4# TAMPAX TAMPONS ; Sterat. Coupon Bxdlrat Sal., May S. FREE WITH THIS COUPON 50 EXTRA TbS'" STAMPS WITH $5.00 PURCHASE OR MORE (Ixeluding Baar, Wina A Claarettoa) Radaam this Coupon at National Ppod Stores. Coupon oxpirot Sat4 May B: Luxurious Shomgoo Head & Shouldsrs Mg For Luxurious Hair CoM YO-5 Hair Conditioner. S-M. Jar, 160 H K l‘()NTIA(, PHIW. Craftsmiin 1-HP Routers Cut up to Deep Craftspian 1?^-HP, -7-in. Rleetric Hand Saws i Regttlarly at $49.99 Include* edge fnuide »33 Regularly at $49.99 Anti-kidkback clutch '35 Craftsman 2-Speed Walking Sprinklers Craftsman Heavy-Duty 26-inch Rider Mowers Carrying Case ""'$4.99;- Regularly at $19.99! Pouble lugged wheels 1388 Regularly at $269.99! Easy to ride and^rive NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Rout^ can groove, rout, mortise, make dovetail joints, ■ n Toi ■ ..........^ - NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Just say, “CHARGE IT” at Sears trim Torioica. 100% ball bearings. Collet-type chuck takes %-inch shank bits. 110-120 volts. $10.99 Drill-Bit Set, 17-pieee ........______________ $6 (]uts 2 5116 in. deep at 90°; Exclusive 2-in-l base design. Houiiing design allows full view of cutting line. Antikickback safety clutch. 100% ball and needle bearings, permanently lubricated. Save! NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Useful coverage 20 ft. long by 43 ft. wide. Operates on minimum pressure of 15 lbs. Completely raclo^ed gear blpx. Selectro knob for springier •adjustment.^ Neutral* plus 2-speeds. Save $6.11! - ' 6-HP, 4-cycle engine. No-pull ratchet starter. Clutch disengages blade. Self-cleaning blade prevents the grass from clumping. Mower has forward, neutral and re-vers^engine controls. Buy now! Shop Tomorrow, 9 A.M. Until 9 P.M. 'Satisfacllon gnaraniccd or you)’ money back ■ r \t. I L V‘ 1,.. VI ' " 'V Tj * V ' ;tT'3P )NKSJ)AY, MAV a, You Can Count on Us ... Quality Costs No More at Seai > REDUCED *60 at Sears Now . . . Durable 5/8-in. Rubber Hose Regular $6.99 50-fi. Charge It • 5/8*inch diameter for maximum water flow at all times • Slays flexible in cold te^nperutiires, • Guaranteed for 10 full years Imagine, a 50-ft nibbel' (i^rden hose at tbis exceplionul low price. Hose hiiH a rieamIeH« rubber cover reinforced with knit rnyon cord plus rubber inner tube. Solitl brass couplings. Regular 69c SleelTTobc Hanger....-........4ic PHONE SEARS, FE 5-/I17I for All Your Garden Tools Custom 4-Speed 6-HP Tractors 33999 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Euity Payment Plan Reifularly ul *399.99 Craft8inan 22-Inch .3 I/2-HF Rotary Mower HeKuliirly at $IP>.99! t’lill remote eotilrols Shift into uiiy of the four forwanl Hpccds or l^everse and see how easy power gardening can be. 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Sturdy steel building . .. the answer to all your outdoor storage problems! Hurry in, sale ends Saturday. Craftsman 18-Inch Reel Power Lawn Mowers Regularly at $89.99 YOU SAVE $10,901 7999 Craftsman Electric Hedge Trimmers '' Reg. $29.99 ^25 Charge II Craftsman 6-1 IP 36-lneh Riders Now at 399'*’ Charge It 12-in. blades, double cutting Tlircc-spccd IrnnsniisHion. Reedge. Handle adjusts. ]2.'>6 coil start, tiasli controls, strokesaminutc. Savel . 12-V Hattery .Start,.. 479.99 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Recoil starter atul finger-tip controls for the tlmitijo and clutch! Air filter pre-cleaner. Qaick-type roller height adjustment 1/2 to 1% inches. SHOP 9 A.M. UNTIL 9 P.M. TOMORROW lIVSTALLED-Oiir Strongest Craftsthan 24-Inch Riding Rotary Mowers Craftsman 3-HP, 20-In. Self4*t*opeIIed Mowers Regular at $199.99 YOU SAVE $20.00! 17999 Regularly at 899.99! Crass Catcher ..... 7.99 NO MONEY Down on Sears Easy Payment Plan Powerful 5-HP engine, no-pull starter. Air*€ilter pre-cleaner. Ceared transmission and direct chain drive. Full remote controls, foot operated brake, clutch. Four cutting bights. Save at Sears! NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment^lan No-pull starter. Air filter pre-cleaner. Front wheel drive makes turning easy. Aluminum housing. Six quick-change cutting heights, 1 Vs to 2 11/16 in. Full remote fln|errtip controls. Buy now! Cliain Link Fencing 92e Free Estimate Sears will be happy to estimate the cost of fencing your yard.' Expert Installation Sears will arrange for trained installation men to put up your* chain link fence or any other fencing you choose at Sears.' Fencing Department, Perry St. Basement 48-in. Height INCLUDES: fence, top rail, line posts, loop caps and hardware. Per Ft. on purchases over 70 ft. NO MONEY DOWN on Sears EaSy Payment Plan For Strength, permanence, beauty in a fencing material Sears chain link fence is your answer. Keeps your family lind pets enclosed in safety; keeps trespassers and unwanted stray animals out. Attractive diamond pattiM-n enbances tbe beauty of any lawn. Std. galvanized steel wires are woven every 2 inebes for extra strength. Gates, Corner and End Posts Extra. ♦ - )m> nlow n I tmli;ir I Use Your Credit... Just say, ‘‘Charge It” at Se^irs Now! f ’ . ■ • ^ TIIK IWTIAC’ niKSS. VVKDNIiSliAY, MAY fi, liMm Sinking of Lusitania 50 Years Ago Gave U.S. a Battle Cry rKD/TOnt MOTS - De-tpU« th« Oehnan V boat warning, the huge mimel •ailed from New York. Her name wa$ LuMania, and she had a date with history fust 50 years ago May 7 off the Irish coast. One. torpedt) from U30 cost 124 Ameritm Hoes, and gave the nation a battle cry.) NEW YORK (AP) - The talk of the town that drlwly Saturday morning. May 1, 1915, was a alngular notice that appeared among the ,ahlpplng news In most of New York newspapers, It was slgiu'd by* tlie Imperial Oerman Embassy. •‘Notice: “Travelers intending to embark on the Atlantic voyage are renjiiuled that a slate of war cxiats Iretween Cermany and her allies and (Ircat Britain and her allies, that the zone of war includes the waters adjacent to the British Isles; that in accordance with final notice given by the Imperial («e|'man ftovern-ment vessels flying the flag of Great Britain, or of any of her allien, are liable to destruction in those waters and (bat travelers sailing in the war zone on ships of Great Britain or her allies do so at their own risk.” tanla'a passengers could smell land. The const of li'tdanrl hung tow on tile horizon, hidden in a light fog. Shortly before noon, Queenstown messaged: "Submarine activity in southern part of Irish Channel, la.st heard of 20 miles south of Coninglreg Llgiit Ves- 1,415 Cars Borrowed Without Authorization BKLGHADK 1/11 During UK54 Belgrade had 1,4If) cases of “un authorlz lake a iiearing on (be landmark. The slight cliange was pre cisely what Kapitanloutnant Schwieger wnnftxl. It gave him a clean bow shot at the liner nvut Lusitania on lior starlaiard side between tile ifiinl aiul foUrtii funnels. It eX|>loded In the boiler rooms of the great ship. A sec-oiwl blast, either n boiler or coal (lust, followed the first. Lusitania listed io starboard. Her l)ow dipped to meet the sea. nillONG OF HUMANITY Kapilanleutnant SchwiegiT, watching through his pert.scope, noted: "II seems as if the vessel will be afloat only a short time., Submerge to 24 meters I and go to sea. 1 could not have fired a second lorp«Mlo Into (Ids throng of humanity attempting to save llieiuselves." A A' ♦ Aboard the Lusitania the order was given to abandon ship, llie port lifeboats were useless. The starboard list held them Monument li Erected to Living Tree Surgeon KNIN, Yugoslavia t/IV llrate-fu) villagers at nearliy Ivosevac pul up a mompnenl to .landrlja Manojlovlc, 75, who grafted fiidt tices, for them free for many years lb' is prol)ably the only living Yugoslav except l’resid(>nt Tito who has a monument. fast to the side of the ship. The starboard Ixults fared only a llltle l)etler. Alfred Gwynno Vanderbilt, 37, multimillionaire sportsman, gave his life jacket to a woman and set out to find another. He went down wltli ll|e slltp. Ho did ICtIrert Hubbard and Ids wife, Alice, Charles Frohman, noted Ihenlrlcnl prcxlucer, hdd at^tress Rita Jollvet: "Why fear death? It 1s the most beautiful adventure in life." He went to his adventure. Miss Jollvet survlvcHl. Capl. Turner intended to go down with his ship He was climbing the halyards In full uniform when he suddiady found Idmself in the water, the list was that great. He, too, survived. At 8:80 p m , only 22 minutes after the torpedo struck, the stern of Lusltaida lifted Idgh In the nir and, propellers still churning slowly, she plunged One Jerk df Lever Pulls the Evidence NAHHVILMO, Tenn. 141 Policeman John Calvo Jr., and Ids t)urtner slepprxl Into the American Legion post No. 147 lierc to confiscate three slot machines. (5ilvo just to sc(x tliat tlie macldm-H were working put a (‘oin In one machine, pulie(j the lever and hit the Jackpot. Out gushed coins which he put in an envelope qnd marked “evidence.” bow first to the tKdtom, her suction dragging many des|airato swimmers down wlUi her. In all 1,108 of the L950 pasen-gers and crewmcif died — and 124 of them were Americans, a fact that was to embarrass the imt>erial Gerlman (lovemment a(Kl indirectly cause Its downfall. ' President Woodrow Wilson's protest note condemning Oer-mimy’s unrestricted submarine warfare was worded so strongly that his secretary of slate, William Jenidngs Bryan, reslgmid over it And, slightly less than two years bd.(T, un aroused America went to war with tlie battle cry “Remember the Lusitania!” Understandably, the notice j was a particularly hot topic that | morning on Pier 54 at the f(K)t of | V\' 13th ,S(. where 1,959 travelers were about to embark on the j New York to Liverpool voyage i on a vessel that flew (he British | flag. Her name: Lusitania. | “Fa.stest and lafge.st steamer now in Atlantic. service,” the Cunard Line called its ocean monarch. Sbe was 32,000 tons; nine decks tall; 790 feet long. Even with six of her 25 boilers shut down as a wartime economy measure, she could do 21 knots, much faster than those new terrors of tlie seas, the submarines, or the U-boats, as the Germans called them. DIDN’T SHOW If the warning notice had frightened any of the Lusitania’s 1,257 passengers and 702 crewmen, it didn’t show. At 12:20 p.m. while the ship’s band blared “Tipperary” and Elbert Hubbard, author of the inspirational “Message to GOr-cia,” waved gaily from the boat deck, the Lusitania put to sea. She was scheduled to be In Liverpool next Saturday, May 8. Only the day before, across 3,-500 miles of ocean, another ship — but much smaller — had put to sea from the port of Emden, Germany. Hers was a quiet, lonely departure. The German navy called her “Unterseeboote 20,” or simply U20. She was a submarine skippered by Kapi-tanleutnant Walter Schwieger, just turned 32 and starting his first command. NEARED COAST Not until the evening of May 6, as she neared the coast of Ireland, was Lusitania reminded that there was a war. The message came from Queenstown, Ireland, at eight bells: “Submarines active off the south coast of Ireland.” Lusitania would pass Fast'net, a rocky islet off the south coast of Ireland, in the morning. At dawn, Friday, May 7, Lusl- HeuuiiMU“Brj3Mm. E WATER WONDER - Aufomatic Gas Water Heater You Can Count on Us ... Quality Costs No More at Sears Sears Has Everything That’s New for 1965 in... Kenmore Classic Gas Rang^ PLUS Easy Cooking with... High Broiler ia at don’t have to atoop to look. BIk enough for a family-size ateak or chop dinner. See-level Oven lets you see at a glance what’s cooking. There ia no need to open door or atoop to aee. . . no heat can eacape. One-Hour Timer givea you aet-and-for-get cooking. Haa bell ^ to remind you when y your meal' ia ready to aerve. No-Drip Cooktop apilla are contained, don’t make a mess. Eaay-to-clean porcelain finiah won’t atain. Lift-up Cooktop givea you easier cleaning of your range. Re-movable burners, grates, oven tacks and guides. 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No Trade-in Required 129** No Trade-in Required ! nlou M IN)nliau iMitaic MIC l’ON'l’IA(’ PHIC.S.S, VVlCI)Ni^:S|)AY, MAY \ HHW Women's Federation Meets for Group Reports Selecting favors for the Junior Pontiac Women's Club annual (liih, ner Monday in the Pontiac Country Club are Mrs. Margaret llulclunson of Thorpe Street, second vice pres- ident (from left); Mrs. George Brinkman, Snowapple Drive, hide-pcudeucc Tiovnship, club president: and Mrs. Clarence A. Pudiiey of Elsinore Drive, first vice president. I'rcHldcnls of Iho 20 nroa dubs roprcsoniwl In the Onk-Iniul ('ounly Kodonilion of Women’s (’lul)s will report on Ibeir iiloni’ with a stale eonv<*ntlon re|)orl by Mrs Italpb Sebowaller Tbe Oak TUdfic Woman’s (luh, Royal Oak, will be the selling for Ibe 7 p m. rneeling Friday. William .1, Mullendore of Ibe Mleblgun Detparlmetil of Con .servalion will be tbe speaker followed by \he Insinuation of offlcor.s. Woman's Club and the Junior i bapter will hostess the nrieet-Ing. Officers training day will be held on May 14 In the Hloom' Held Hills home of Mrs. Forbes llaseall. May Party Had Art, Fashion Club Gives to YWCA and Elects Ni;W LFADFJIS Those a.ssuming new oPliga-Hons will be Mrs. Sebowiiller, pi esideni; Mrs, Oouglas True man, first vice presideni; Mrs. Vernon .leans, second vice presidi'iil; Mrs. Allon Me (’oiler and Mrs. (’ H Shkes, secretaries; and Mrs. .lobn Walralli, treasurer. Tbe new direclors arc Mrs. Adolf .lerema and Mrs, Joseph IMiillips. Members of Ibe Oak Ridge Jaycee Unit Elects Slate of Officers Some 2li0 women from Fpis-eopal cburidies hn4.l'<‘ convoca lion atlended Ibe annual May p arty sponsored by I b e Cburcbwomen of tbe lOpisco-pal Cburch of the Advent on Tuesday. Special guests were a grou|> of women r(‘sidents at .SI, l,uke’s Fpiscopal llotne. An oil painting by M An eleclioii of officers was held by meinliers of Ibe Wa-lerlord .laycee Auxiliary Mon da\' evening, .Selling for Ibe e\enl was llie NancywoiMf Court home of Mrs. David Packard. (Jiarle.s I.. Dcnehy, daughler of Mrs. William S. Malarkey, vice-president, .set the theme for Ibe luncheon and card parly. The 'l.lsbelb Shop of It 1 r-mingbam presenled a style sliow. Mrs. .John Brown and Mrs. Jeffery Cornisb were eobosl-esses at the meeting whftre members elected Mrs. Whitney Carnahan president. Tile Pontiac Opti-Mrs, Club voted to make a donation to the YWCA building fund at a meeting last evening in the Wenonab Drive home of Mrs. 11, A, Miller. Mrs. Kay Phalen, assi.stant director, of nurses for l|ie Oakland County Health Depart-menl, spoke on fbb work of jHiblic bealib nurses. Buffet Dinner Honors Men A buffet dinner in honor of ’’Men's Night” was held recently in the Hansdowne Street home of Mrs. Thomas Spra-gle by members and their escorts of the Waterford (Jiild Study Club. Others elected to office were Mrs. Cornisb, vice president; Mrs, Tim Patler.son and Mrs. David Zuobike, secretaries; and Mrs. Richard (lilchrisl, treasurer. (!ocbairmen for tlie affair which will provide o|)crating funds for the group’s projects wbre Mrs. Paul Cioode and Mi'S. Kugene Nalepa. Hostesses were Mrs. Fred eric Prince, PX’W president, and Mrs. Malarkey. An oil painting .symbolic of spring set a theme for the annual May party sponsored by the Chiirchwonien of the Episcopal Church of the Advent on Tuesday. Modeling fashions are Mrs. S. Miller Wetsman, Beverly Hills (from left) and Mrs. Lawrence Stone of Apple Lane. His Son Suffered New direclors are M r s. Richard Schwab, Mrs .lames (Uird and Mrs. Michael l*al-lerson. Husband’s Refusal Unfair Mr Mrs. George Morrow of Sylvan Lake (at left), project chairnian for the JPWC, and Mrs. Cecil McCalluin of Cherokee Road, social chairman for the annual dinner, are looking over the program for the evening. V offici'i'S elei'led were Tom Hruska, presideni; Mrs. Robert Bradley Jr., first vice presideni; Mrs. Glen W. Whilri'oll, second vice president; Mrs. Stephan Tzineff, .si'cretary; and Mrs. Isadore Mint/., treasurer. .Mrs. Herbert (s)oley and Mrs. Buhl Burt were cohorst-esses at (bis meeting. Cl u e s I s included Dr. and Ml'S. Donald Talroe and Mr. and Mrs. Robert l.awyer. Honorary m e m b e r s and Ibrnr husbands present were Mr, and Mrs, William .Sbunck, Mr, and Mrs, Donald Redmond and Ibe James Den Her- DfSTRICT OFFICK Ted McCullough wa.s der: elected vice president of the district at a meeting held in Waterford last month. At this same lime, Mrs. Curd was named in DisI Plans were inarU' to purchase a reference table for the new Waterford I.ibrary. By ABKiAIL VAN BLRKN d’fAR ARBY: Our son won a s|)ee<’h contest at school. He was to go on to the state p e e c h con- I “OulsIanfiing^JayocUe tosl, but this riel Nine.” is what bap- , | i Mr V William Freyermiilh •ohosless. With Symphony Gordon Staples Idays By JOHN C. TOUSLEY Violini.st Gordon Staples highlighted the fifth Pontiac Symphony Orchestra Concert, presented last night at the Pontiac Northern High School Auditorium. A large crowd wa's on hand to hear a fine concert. ican Symphonette rounded out the first half of the program. Opening the program was ' Tschaikowsky’s melodious Andante Cantabile, written for string orchestra. The violin section was impressive in its handling of the pulsating melody of the selection. The orche^ra seemed to lack confidence and precision in the maze of Gould’s dilfi- (’ult rhythms. * * * ^ // The Tango and the Giiara- f ' ' cha were the most artistically ^ performed, with the ba.ss clar- Jjm * , inets and the flutes doing an mif outstanding job. RUSSIAN SELECTION The second half of t|ie pro- Except for a few moments when the sections were not to-, gether, the selection was performed with sensitivity and sincerity. gram began with Anatpl Liadov’s "Kikimora” I^egeiid lor Full Orchestra. Liadov’s music flows with the ('olor and dynamics of medieval Russia. Three dances from “T h e Bartered Bride;” by Smetana, played by the full orchestra, were next on the program. STRINGS APPLAUDED These full-bodied, energetic dances provided a showcase for the orchestra’s fine string section,' In addition, the trumpets are to be commended ^or theilh exceptional showing during the solo passages of the “Vivace.” The conclusion of the concert featured guest artist Staples performing Tschaikowsky’s Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in D Major, Op. This was undoubtedly one of the high points of the concept series. \ A birthday party will be hi'ld on May Ifi for a young patient at the Pontiac Stale Hospital. Mrs. Gilchrist will be the hosti'ss. Mrs. John Triilii and Mrs. Gary Kreifeldt will assist. DEAR MOTHER: 1 agree with you. Since you gave your son no help, you should have signed the statement. I think your husband did his son an injustice. Church Unit Will Lunch The Woman’s .Society of Chri.'tian Service (WSCS) of Central Methodist (’hurCh will be .served a favorite salad luncheon Thursday by members of the Marla Simon.sson Circle. Hostesses at the 12:.K) p.m. event will be the Naomi Glea-.son Circle with Mrs. Keith John.son as chairman, Mrs. P. T. Jones wilt conduct the installation of officers, assisted by Mrs. Charjes Crawford. pened. My husband and I were asked to sign sworn statements saying that we did i)ot help our son with the writing of his speech as it have been an original composition. 1 signed it willingly as we had given our son no help. In fact, we did not even hear the speech until he gave it in competition. My husband refused to sign the statement, saying that the boy’s word alone should be sufficient, and he resented the school authorities taking such measures to insure jlie truth from a student. I said if we. did not sign the statement they would think that we. helped our boy with his speech. Well, my hii.sband refused to sign it, and our .son was f disqualified from the contest. I would like your opinion because my husband and I are still at odds because of this. A MOTHER DEAR ABBY: You recently ran three letters in your coi-I'wo were from women boasting that they had each given birth to 16 children. And one was from the woman whom you congratulated on being the youngest greatgrandmother - a woman whose mother had her at 15, who had her first child at age 15; whose daughter bore her child at age 15, and whose granddaughter bore her first child at the ripe old age of 16. The average female can bear a child at age 1.1, and can produce approximately 30 children in the span of her fertile years. Breeding for most people in the easiest thing iri the world, ^he eongralIllations should go to those who don’t. The next time you run an informal contest, why don’t you try to find the mother who has produced the most college graduates In her family? Or the mother who has had the most children in the Peace Uorps, or accomplished something equally worthwhile? Sincerely, MARRIED AT 27 MOTHER OF ONE “Vi. fHxli diamond splendor... 'ta. for Mother to treasure Ponlliic Pr»«i Photo The charm and gaiety of .Smetana’s dances wjra Caught by the orchestra in a flawless rendition that delighted the audience. M(M-ton Gould’s Latm-Amer- Mr. Staples, who is a.ssoci-'i ate concertmaster for the Detroit Symphony, played a most difficult composition with art-istrjL apd emotion. The orchestra played as if inspired, and welded ItselL into a iinif with the soloist. FINE CLIMAX The scope of the composition. the precision of the orchestra, and the exci'eptional talent of this fine arti’st provided a memorable climax to an outstanding concert. Laurena Jean Laurain, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Merle Laurain of^ West Fairmount Street, will reign as Junior Miss Poppy for the Chief Pontiac Unit 377, Am er ican Legion during Poppy sale di^ys, May 20-22. Eight-year-old , Laurena is in the third greuie at 0}ven School. \Friday. Laurena was-chosen Junior Miss Poppy ^or her actmties in'the junior auxiliary and for \er scholastic record. Sewing Machine TUNE-UP ONE WEEK SPEClAi »025 W R.g. $7 ONLY Ktg. $7.95 Includes... cleaning, oiling and adjusting to (jour satisfaction. DOMELCO OF PONTIAC ’ MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER , CALL 338-4521 Photographers ■Phone ror Appointment, FE 5-.3260. FE 5*0322 TH!(S OFFER ENDS IN 15 DAYS Omega diamond-sefwatch is one of the most magnificent irea.sures a ■woman can own. Every diamond is individually inspected for color, cut, clarity and brilliance. The high-precision Omega movement... checked at 1497 manufa'cturing stagc.s....is one of the most accurate in the world. Models from .'Jl 25 * to over $1000 F.T.I. ' At r.oiffiire Par Anne you Will find a large selection of Ideal Gifts for Mother. Beauty Aids, Fashion Tress Wigs and a Gift that will please all, A Coiffure Par Anne Gift Certificate. OPEN 6i30 ’TIL 9 KXCEri' .SAT. Anne 073-0712 Colirlenlnchn -4713 Dixie liwy. k Owner - Operator ' Drayton Plain* 81 N. Sapfinaw St. REOMLOIVD^S Jewelry FREE PARKING IN REAR OF STORE i . !■ H,\- J * B-U TIIH I’ONTIAC VHKSS, AVF.DNESDAV, MAA' », 1»«» STAPP'S . . . say bring the family m for . . . FUN TIME SHOES J < 0/^ The »ee»on Is on h«iu)! Kelts eie the shoe (nr mosl spnng a the best possible reie, ltiaol;ii(:a;s.s CAM. 11: r> Ol(»7 orlilait Hour: .S/ti-riiil Low I’rir Mon. Ilini. .Sul C, lo 7 - »> l«» 10 I'.M. MAKE KlUHEIlVATIONS NOW KOIt MOTIIEIl’8 DAY >V < or„rr oj rike and Perry Can 167 LECGETT The LeggefT School PTA will hold a school fair from 4 to 8 p.tn., Saturday, lo raise money for a blackloppcd Itaskel-hall court and midliptirpo.se play area. The main attraction will be a ehimpan/(>e show. Members of the fair committee are Mrs, .Inhn R. Wilson, Mrs. John Carlson and Mrs. Robert Chapman. COVERT Wonderful gift for Mother... Comfy Slippers 4f 1j| The Part'nl Educalion As.so- j ciation will hold a husband and wife cooperative dinner meeting at Covert School, Waterford Township at (i:30 p.m., | Thursday. Miss Esther Middlewood of Lansing will speak on “F'a-thers are People Too.” ,i Black Coral Powder Blue To Discuss Book About Rome Mr. and, Mrs. K. B. Valentine will lead the group discussion at 8 p.m. Friday at the Waterford Great Books’ group. Members will meet in the CIA Building. Percy Lowery will act as j a ’thor’s advocate during the ' discussion of ‘T h e Decline and Fall of the Roman 'Empire.” I ■ ./Y TIIK. I'OjMriAC’ HliKSS. W l4l)N H;SI)A V. MAV ^ mm u~-ia 3 Garden Clubs to Meet 32 pages of color planning ideas lor every room in your home...and for the exterior too! STOP IN FOR YOUR FREE COPY AT, .. PONTIAC GLASS CO. 23 W. Lawrsnc* FE 5 6441 mn l white, embniulered oronma' ove^ laflcta /or Uuda Mat)/ Smith who haatme Mn». r)ori(i{euker will he Mrs. Mabel ScJiultx of Mahel’s Herb and Flower Shop. Her topic is Tui^sday Group Starts Year at Pontiac Club I’he Ladles Tuesday Tec Golf League opened its new season yesterday, at the l‘on-liac (!ountry Uhih. I’resident, Mrs Donald Van-Tine wcdconied former mem-hers. Mis, Henry Grace, Mrs. Jack Bredle, Mrs. Miilh I’ermi and Mrs. John Donley back in the organisation. Mrs. Delbert Hammett h the new golf chairman and Mrs. Robert Taft, the social chairman. The members are |)hmning a ‘ llushands’ Diiy" on June 13. ‘‘Planting and Propagation of Herlts by Guttings and .Seerls.” Birmingham The Birmingham branch has sot 12:30 p.m. Monday for Us annual spring luncheon to be held in the Birmingham Community II 0 u s e Mrs. Leon Jackman and Mrs. Stewart Cram are cocludrmen for this e\/ent. Arrangements of p o tied geraniums will In; placed on' each table by Mrs. II o b e r I Blvans, Mrs. Derwood Gamble. Mrs. Robert McVeigh. Mrs. Gleii Wlegand aniLMrs. l-ord laud. ^ Mrs. J. Paul McConkle with Mrs. Kdward P. Sammut and Mrs. Riilph Midi! will greet the inernlx'rs and their guest.s. STUDFNT rO TALK Mrs. Fred L'inkennun- will introduce the speaker, llleh aid Ross of Poland, an ex-chiinge student here. Mrs. George Tlscher and Mrs, Harry Hoyt will be In (‘barge of reservations a n d tickets. Oakland Another Birmingham branch, (Oaklaml) will hold its meeting on Monday in the home of Mrs. L. A. Smith. (,’ohoslesB will be Mrs. W. N. Wiss. S|)eaker for this program will lie AI Goldner of the Gold-ner Walsh Nursery. “Shrub Trimming Made lr. PONTIAC'S ONLY AUTHORIZED NECCHI NELCO 1 DEALER -USED^RlBUiLfl • SINCIIt •Wlll'IK • KKNMOItt; • DOMI^TK •MA\ •’-K.NVnni; • HltOTlIl l!.S • n AM • M,W llOMt; AUjfORK GUARANTEED FOR ONE YEAR ] »>AL 335-9283 i ELIZABETH LAKE RD. NEAR TELEGRAPH ACROSS FROM PONTIAC MAIL PONTIAC Delta Zetas Name Officers Two inslalliitions of officers was held recently by tlie Oakland Coiinly Alumnae cliapter of Delta Zeta .sorority. The first, was held for officers of the exeeutivc board. Selling for this ritual was Hie I'Vank-liM home of Mrs. Winfield C. ilitim.in. , After lie.iring Dr. T. Man-ford Medee on flic "Silent world," Mrs. Laurence M. Tre-varrow .Jr. assumed her duties as tile new president. Taking over new offices with her, were Mrs, Carlyle W. Bees, vice president; Mrs. Cordon Curnow, s(‘eretary: and Mrs. Carl Koelsch, treasurer. Others w('re Mrs. Charles Kleek(‘nstein .Ir , Mrs. I'■r(>d-eriek I.ut/e, Mrs Cecil King, Mrs. Kdward W Martin ,lr , and Mrs. Ilertierl W Selinet 7,ky (Concluding tlie list are Mrs. Forbes S.'Ilascall, Mrs. LYed-eriek Suppniek, Mrs. Dan Na-gc'lvoort, and Susan Fkley. (HIOIJI* I INS'TALI.ATION 'Hie second installation was held by Croup 1 of that organization at a hruneh in the Birmingluini tiome of M r s. Ilus-sell Costello. at this lime that Mrs Kdward Wirih was installed hs chairman and Mrs. Hobert Boger iis s»‘erelary tnuisiiiyr. Bog. (Hiour II / (iroup If has selicdu/ed a meeting on Monday at 8 p.m. in the Bloomfield Hills home of Mrs. 'Prevarrow .Ir. An-o t h e r installation will take place here, following the packing of discarded clothing to be .sent to the Navajos Indians. 'Phose elected include Mrs. I’liyllis Morrison, chairinan; Mrs. Cordon Knapp, Mrs. Charles Kleckenslein .Jr., Mrs. .J.'i ry Stephenson, and M r s. .James I'iall. UTICA BOCIIK.STKH 'Pile Utica-ItcK'hester a r e a (Croup HI) will install new officers at a c.Miperative dinner in the home of Mrs. Ralph LaParl of Algonac on May Z.*). Assuming n.'w duties for this group will be Mrs. .James Tay- ®ICKEH '>B0 Makes 4 delicious chicken sandiviches as fast as you can spread it! TENDER CHICKEN MEAT lightly seasoned and perfectly blended into a delicious, hearty spread i.. that’s new Underwjood Chicken Spread (^uick-as-a-wink way to make four de* •' licious chicken sandwiches. • WHETHER ALL BY ITSELF OR COMBINED with lettuce, tomatoes or American Cheese or just about anything. .. Underwood Chicken Spread is the great, .new, LOOK FOR UNDERWOOD CHiCKEN SPREAD in • the sunny yellow wrapper . . . in the I meat spread section of your favorite | food store. LOOK FOR THE SUNNY YELLOW RACKAGE P. S. It’s the tastiest thing that’s ever « happened to cra,ckers! * lor ii.s chairman. More officers are Mrs, .James J'llovich and j Mrs. Kenneth Wiirn. I WSCS Sets May Party Needlework Kit Charles II. Collins of Bayhrook Drive, has received his master’s degree in business adrnin-'istration from the Vrii-iversitij of Michigan. He also holds a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from, the University of Minnesota. 'Ph<‘ annual May Day luncheon and afternoon of cards will tie lu'ld by the Woman’s .Society of Chri.stian Servict’ of the I'’oiir Towns Mi'thodist (,'luncheon Friday. |{().s(’ (iiKisI, Towels 'Pickets for the event at iXMin in the fellowshij) halj may b(‘ purchased at the door, or by conlficting Mrs. (,'hester Am.anti of Sarvis Street. It's a Family Affair Mr. and Mrs. Cliarles II, (Y’awford, Wesllawn I) r i v e, entertained at a family dinner party Sunday. Among the guests were’Mr. and Mrs, C. Grey Austin and cliildmi of Clarksville, N. Y. Mr. Austin received h 1 s Ph.D. degree from the University of Michigan at com-ineneement exercises on Saturday. Mrs. Austin’s parents are the Max Millers of Frank Street. Not only are these rose guest, towels as prelly as can be, but I lliey will blend lumutifully with any color seh<‘me, just as fresh roses do, and will make most acceptable w(‘dding, anniversary and shower gifts. The (l(;s|gnK arc to be eiti-JiroidCTcd ill erpREasic5Hs:P' WATCtPRIRi^lR iS • Grystah-FItletl ‘ • WATCH BANDS NEI$NEr$ 42 N. S«iDl«aw,fE 6^3593 Ed Mono, Manntliir Hostesses for the meeting included Mrs. Waller Peters, Miij. Jack Nel.son, Mrs. Warren Bvers and Mrs Herman Dennis. CUSTOM MADE SLIP COVERS Avaraga Chair $31.95 ^ Avtraga Sofa $52.95 Complata; Including Fabric, ZIppart and Labor FABRIC FAIR MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER COBBIES. a red cross shoe SANDAL YOU'LL LOVE! It's brightMt's openi It’s $\»p9rbly shaped for flattery with smooth vinyl inserts. Ahd 'tNs pretty little sandal supports your foot firmly on o-^rfect height of heel. cushioning wafer platform Tx^th Cobbies’ famous fit to^moke you love if more andTium I FIRSrXaZE, 13.99 Bone White and Black PAUirs SHOE STORE 35 N. Saginaw Street •r witti Thi Aimricin Ni TUK I’ONTIAC 1‘HICHS. VViq)NI^.. The way Scotsmen venerate their romiinlic piisi wiHi ils colorful co.stumes is shown in oiir picture of Scotsmen gathered to dance and play national games Far oil, an athlete to.sses the caber, a heavy failc. FOR YOU TO DO: Join the Scottish boy's (the girl.s like it, too) in dancing their favorite Highland Fling Alter hopping on left foot with left arm up, ghange to right foot and right arm. Notice hovil the fx on the wall blared forth, announcing that the broHdeasting r(S)in of the train was beginning its work. OIHLISII WKLCOMK "Welcotne, passengers," said a girlish voice with that rasping assurance that girlish voices tend to have in today's China “Let us all work together during our trip. We of the crew want your suggestions and your criti cism.” A bit of martial music as the train pulled out, and then an announcement about the three-line system. The three-line system, we were told, consisted of putting your luggage neatly in a line on the overhead rack, your coats neatly on the hooks below, and your towels neatly over the back of your .seat. Nervously, 1 adjusted uiy effects, though my interpreter. An, assured me that the suggestions were meant for those in the "hard seats” --.jlhe coaches up ahead. /,- ^PfCfAl t r AePOAT The starving of tea com-mencod, and during a lull In Hut announconnmt An ami 1 dls-euHHcd tea. I gleantxl the Information that it Is |H)Hslblc to make ten of anything -- even trees. The young sh(M)t8 of eer tain trees, IrolUsl and drl(‘d, make a light green tea of rare freshiK'HS and heauty. The broadcasting nxmi Interrupted this reverie with six-regulations — of which I caught only three: don’t Utter the cars, don’t spit, and tion’t let your children urlnal,e on the flcHir. A spurt of music, and then; "Don’t break things on the train.” We were rolling through expansive farmlands and I remarked to An that there were few people in sight. "Most of t;hina is spar.sely settUni,” he said, atid lauglunl when I told him that many North Americans believe the Chinese are so thick they have to sleep standing up. The box clicked on to list a few tilings that the broadcasting room felt needed • passenger attention. Everybody should get on and off the train in good order. Walt until the train stops before getting off. At way stations, listen for the bell that means the train is leaving. Smokers put matches and birtts in the ashtrays to prevent burning up the train. Mothers take go(Hl care of children and keep I hem off the tables. i minutes MUSKKUON HEICll'I'S (/n -Patrolman Donald l*j. litsiwell, 2tl, was: Attackeil and iHOtlen hy a teen age gang wlaai he sought to break up a fight; was liospltall/ed when a /Millce cruiser, was In an accident; fell on |c« and Nprained his ankle; and tangled with a holdup suspect who nearly pulled him nut a second shay window. So Itedwell turned in his badge. No. Cl, and asked for a new numbflk. I le now wears Madge No. 17. L,ong Life Qedited to Sleeping Outdoors MOSTAIl, Yugoslavia Ifll Mojo Crnallc, now ill, has almost never slept in a luaise since he was a child. As a young shejiheid he las-ame ac<-us-tomed to sleeping out in the hills with his fhx’k In summer and in the sheep pep In winter. I(e has been doing it ever since and attributes his gcaid health to never sleeping In stuffy rooms. Thirty milllcai persons will move into the nalhai’s cities the next 15 years, according to the [’resident's Message on Cities. Cooling-Off Poriod LONDON (UPl) - Jufltica cooled'’a little ywterday when nigh Court Judge Lord Salmon Interrupted a hearing to complain of the heat. Then he removed his shoulder-length wig and told hair counsel they could do the same, MOHli UUUCS Take care of your own luggage, and don’t leave things with [jcople you don’t know. Don’t curry explosives on the train. Then, the news - h of It. This was followed by a comedy riH'ord In the cross talk style so popular in (’hlna ■ a rbyth-1 mlc exchange by two people i This was the story about an old woman who lost sonu- money, i bad it relumed by a soldier, and ; then sel out to find the soldier ; so she could give him a do/en | eggs. She worked her way i through the entire People’s Liberation Army, finding all sorts of hilarious military types but only after some '20 minutes did she find her man. It turned out he didn’t like eggs. The whole train was in convulsions at this, but all applauded the ending he took the eggs and gav(‘ them to sick soldiers One more crosstalk record, this one about people who hog the telephone b(M)lli, and then the cra.shlng chords of the Inter nationale, and the bles.scd news that the broadcast room was closing down for the night. Exhausted, 1 expired — only to Ih! roased at li lo a.m. by the n'surnption of the broadcast day. 1 cast a bleary eye at An, in the opposite bunk and asked what song they were playing. "A very popular song of the day,” he said. "What’s it about’M’ i asked, always interested in contemporary themes. “Pig breeding,” said An, mater of factly. The train had left on the dot, and it arrived on the dot, and it was in every way a splendid train, but I have one suggestion for improvement. PuH those ruddy boxes off the wall, girls. k •ANDOlf.N ^ farutooa 90B W. HURON, PONTIAC ARE A MOST IMPORTANT PART OF OUR BUSINESS WE STOCK OUR OWN! ■ EVERY'tux WE RENT IS ll ^ "AFTER-SIX” BY RUDOFKER 'WM SPECIAL STUDENT PRICES FOR PROMS ' ' BEING CUSTOM TAILORS WE ^ TAKE PRIDE IN-THE. ■5> 1 'w. INDIVIDUAL FITTING OF 1 1| ll EACH GARMENT \Jp. AN, INVITATION; . • WE‘will be pleased to HAVE YOU STOP IN AND SEE l/j 1 NEW Imperial Room II l\\ h DEVOTm^CLUSIVELY TO THE 4 4 SALE AND REI^LOF FOpMAL ATTIRE. ROr^ALO CLARKE TUXEDO DEPT. MGR. "Get: In Your Ordiars Earlv!' RANDOLPH maitHood :USTOM TAILORS AND CLOTHIER UNIFORMS ’ _ 908 W. Huron at Telegraph Ponlinc COLOR TV SPetlAL for Mother on May 9! World'! bodlno Mognovos fleOl»r ' INCLUDES INSTALLATION • 90 DAYS HOME SERVICE • I YEAR PARTS WARRANTY Magnificent G^CS](g1D^CgLlCIc^lcS)r by IX/lcignavox .jiisl look . . . vivid new Color Brila sg. inr.il lube in hnif-nqnin brifjitlnr llrnn most others! Yoti got Quick Pictures— mjlomatically, in just 12 seconds . . . New Chromatona Control dramatically adds nicture depth arid beauty. All this pills sunerb Mar:)navox sound and angmeering built into this dynamic emw all channel, UHF VHF console. 1 i 'ply walnut finish wood cabinet. PRICE INCLUDES EVERYTHING 498 50. No down (laymen! Pontiac Mall: 682-0422 — Open Every Nite 'til 9:00 —- Downtown Pontiac: FE 3-7168—Open Mor^doy & Friday 'til 9:00 GRINNELL'S Pontiac Mall—682-0422 • Downtown 27 S, Saginaw ST.—FE 3-7168 Use Your Charge, 4 Pay Plan (90 days some as cash) or Budget Terms PROFESSIONAL MECHANICS DELUXE QUALITY! KeSOCKET WRENCH ...TOOL SET PSCCISm ISABC By Master Craftsmen! ; V THK PONTlAC^ VljtKSS. ^VKI)NESI)A Y. ISIAY fl, 1 ma Play in Minor' Key Tipton Double Winner PCH Outclasses PNH Hill TI|)lon till ti(‘(l In hl.i IhisI low hiirdUi’i, |>ole vuiilt mul nIioI I Ihi^ SV(.' meet. Tipton h ({tven perfonnance.s of the sprliiK yen- put mid e»ptur: and if there were the Weinberger Special wouldn't he heard much. The WeinhurM r I tialf-mile time on a high-banked, conventional Dffenhauscr road- ^ ^ irds, iind a II S AC. covered the distance in 17Hi championship dirt track car. 1 Johncock hecame the Wein-WOIUJ) MARK burger driver when Warren’s 'Hie sprint car last September I White suffered a broken Ind Winchester, neck in a crash with the sprint world's record for the fastest car la.st July. .ster owned by Pontiac’s Sidne Welnburger and Utica's Frank Wilseck. As the Bill Forbes SpiH ial. the car finished third at “Indy” last year and fourth the year before. The area men bought It from Californian Ted Hallibrund last fall. black-lopped oval track Driver I .lolmcock and the Weinbergei Since then they have run it just once—at Phoenix, Ariz., International Raceway this winter where it qualified ninth. Neither Weinburger no Wil-fieck, who operate Weinburger Enterprises in Utica have ever raced. They have been racing buff^ for 12 years and they now own three racing cars. In additi^ to the conventional roadster, fliey have a U.S. Auto NPIW YORK (AP) — 'Ihe rich . he said. "And when 1 took the g«t _rh;her. So UCLA gets I-ew' trip up there, I found It wasn’t what I wanted. " Redlegs Get Pitchers in Two Tracies CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cincinnati Reds obtainted two new pitchers Tuesday. And the I>os Angeles Dodgers, looking for more outfield strength to replace the injured Tommy Da-Vis, recalled two outfielders from their Spokane, Wash, farm club in the Pacific Coast League. The Reds traded veteran reliever Bill Henry to, the San Francisco Giants for reliever Jim Duffalo, and purchased Dennis Daboll from the Dodg- Alcindor, kept out-of-bounds to college coaches, scouts, aliimni and newsmen the past four years by his coach at Power Memorial High School, Jack Donohue, made his announcement at a press conference at the school’s gym. ‘'This fall I will be attending UCLA,” the articulate teen-ager told some three dozen newspaper, radio and television men.. I chose UCLA because of its atmosphere, the people out there and because it has a curriculum I want.” The Reds bought Daboll, 18-year-old right-hander, from the Dodgers for the first-year waiver price of $8,000 and announced he would be sent to Cincinnati’s Tampa, Fla., club. The Dodgers, here for a series With the' Reids, ^announced they sent Infielder Nate Oliyer to Spokane on a 24-hour recall ba-isis, and recalled from Spokane outfielder Lou Johnson and Out-pelder-infielder Derrell Griffith. - The D)odgers also said they fcave released outfielder Dick Smith outright to Spokane. U. of D. 9 Winner on Three-Run Blast DETROIT (AP) - Cliff Roth-rock smashed a three-run bpm-8-6 college baseball victory over er that boosted Detroit to jri ffotre Dame Tuesday. r The Titans were trailing by (f4 at the bottom of the fifth nning when Rothrock smacked MS second, three-run homer in fivo days. It was his, third such jjome run this year. •• In the fburtti inning Pat Topol-(Ki had helped the Fighting Irish fain an advantage when he bat-^ the only other home run of ' p contest. «» 030 01x4 73 mr UCLA Becomes Richer With frosh Prospect Alcindor. The 7-fool-l New Yorker, most coveted schoolbiy basketball LAUDS COACH Tuesday that he will enter I On the subject of UCLA, the star in recent years, disclosed 17-year-old giant said: UCLA this September. Johnny | “U has a very good coach. Wooden’s UCLANS currently | And besides its basketball, I like rule the college basketball j Los Angeles and the curriculum world with two straight national! at UCLA. I’U take liberal arts, poll.s. The driver will be com-[ broad jump with a leap of 21-2. peting for the first time jit Ihe I Hob Wiggins won the 440 for the famed motor speedway Entrants have the first two weeks of May to get the feel of the asphalt track. Time trials will be May 15-16 and 22-23 to determine the 33 qualifiers. Weinburger, a former Pe sylvanian who lives al '2440 Os- is favored to win this event in trum, admits the fast rear-en- * gine cars will create a scare in the qualifying. titles. but I haven’t decided on a major. I’m interested in writing and music.” National Basketball Association people have had'their eye on Alcindor for some time, but he obviously has given that little thought. "The pros? ’That’s too far ahead to think about.” He adds, though, that if the Special docs make the starting field it should finish among the lop ten because of its superior durability in the long race. The cars are kept in Hastings under the watchful eye of mechanic Dwayne Glasgow. Just last week a rubber bladder was installed in the gas tank of the Special. 'This was an outgrowth of last year’s tragic fiery two-fatality smashup In the “300.” The gas tank comprises the rear third of the Special. The engine and driver’s snug compartment take up the rest of the approximately 10-foot long vehicle. It has averaged 153 miles per hour in the past. The straightaway speed will reach into the 170’s. At that velocity, there’s no time to blow a horn anyway. Nine Errors Committed in Contest Chisox Finally Gain 10-6 Verdict in Poor Fielding Game DETROIT (AP) Four Syracuse farmhands who \ came to Detroit Tuesday night to.watch the Detroil-Ghlcago game probably left shaking their heads and wondering why they were still playing in the International League. The Tigers and While Sox, two of the top three teams In the American League committed nine errors between them—six in Ihe first four innlng.s. Chiefs. Karl Williams w«n the 220 for Central. Central now .shifl.s Us slglits toward tomorrow’s Saginaw Valley Conference meet al Midland, The Detroit errors resulted In six unearned runs for the first-place White Sox who went on to gain a 10-6 victory. There were a couple of other errors by. the Tigers which do not appear In Ihe box score. Dick McAuliffe scored an apparent run on a .sacrifice fly by Jerry Lumpe In the fourth inning, but the White Sox called for the ball and Pete Ward Imiched third. McAuliffe was called out for leaving the base l(K) soon; RBI erased It not only cost the Tigers a run, but l>umpe was charged with a time at bat and the run batted in was erased. Later, catcher Bill Freehan dropped the ball on a third strike to outfielder Ken Berry. Instead of tagging Berry or throwing to first base, Freehan tossed the ball back to pitcher Fred Gladding. While Berry hesitated between the plate and first base'. Gladding threw to Norm Cash to complete the out. T/enny McLain fell victim to the first Tiger mi.scue in the first inning and was partly to blame himself. 'IHE TAKEOFF - Pontiac Central’s Bob Wiggins takes to the air with this leap in the broad jump yesterday against Pontiac Northern. Wiggins wound up second in the event which was won by Northern’s ftob Harris with a jump of 21 feel, 2 inches. (Central won the meet, 8.3-26. LIKED UCLA Through it all stood a disappointed Donohue, named cpach at Holy Cross last pionth and hopeful of taking his prized protege along with hith. I knew he liked Ud,A, but I was hoping right up to now,” Donohue said. Under the personable young coach, Alcindor became the most famed high school basketball player New ■York’s history and setcity records with 2,067 points and 2,-002 i^ebounds. Spores of colleges wanted the ^y, an excellent Student,^ but several weekF^ ago the. word went out that he was interested only in five — UCLA, Michigan', Boston (College, St. John’s of New York and New York University. ' Alcindor visited these five, then took a trip to-Holy Cross. ‘‘Holy Cross came too late,” ABC Doubles Lists Change ST. PAUL , Minn. (UPI) -Scoring picked up at the American Bowling Congresit tourna-'ojlfinent Tuesday when the first chmg^ in the regular doubles :divi$jon |n 10 days was recorded by two Grand Rapids, Mich., contestants. SHANTYBOAT RUNS AGROUND - Jockey 'Smithwick took a tumble after his mount, Shantyboat, fell a.s'he cleared the last jump in the season’s first two and one-sixteenth mile steeplechase at Aqueduct track in New York yesterday. Orkhan Ray, second choice behind Shantyboat, came on to win the race. Track Settlement Is Far Away NEW YORK (AF) - Randy Matson, world record-holder in the shot put, and other top college athletes will be left off the U. S. track and fiqld team for the meet with Russia this summer unless the AAU and NCAA reach a quick ^gce. Such a peace seemed unlikely today, atthOuigh efforts to settle it were still being made. which includes more than 100 of the nation’s sports writers. The two executives rehashed their differences in a luncheon meeting at the World’s Fair, but there still was no decision. An agreement of the five-year-old dispute appears remote unless the White House or Congress intervenes. BITTEr FEUD The key to the bitter battle domestic meets, whether open or closed “ Byers was asked what would be done in case Matson, the towering Texas A&M . star, wanted to compete in the National AAU Championships which will decide the ds. team going to Russia in July “Unless the meet had\cef-tif|-cation of the Track and\Field Federation the college’s am. A top level conference , was, lies in the matter of ;sanctions he would be ineligible,” Byers Tony Loppicolo and Tony reported held secretly in Chica-i for domestic meets. h.,h # .j *h t u Lomonaco managed a 1,247 g„ while executive directors off The AAU insists on keeping which propelled them into a thd two organizations, Walter its age-old authority, granted by i ® Taii‘ ^ nmth-place tie with Ed Mathew- Byers of the NCAA and Col. Don the international federations, of o" , Steinl of Virginia Hull of the AAU, met in a public | laying the ground rules for the i loppicolo rolled a j forum in New York Tuesday.111 sports it governs, principally i ^ for such meets. 630 and Lomonaco a 617. | Details of the Chicago confer-1 track and field, basketball Lomonaco also was high for j ence were not disclosed. Veteran 1st Baseman Tutors Replacement By Umted Press International I fourth inning outburst by the Rookie Costen Shockley is re-1 against Wally Bunker ceiving some first class tutoring with his fourth home run of the Cash hobbled Floyd Robinson’s grounder but recovered in time tc to.ss the ball to McLain who had raced over to first. But McLain took his fool off the bag and Robinson was safe. The ■ White Sox went on to score three run.s—two of them on Ron Hansen’s single. WILD PITCH A wild pitch by Chicago starter Gary Peters allowed Freehan to score the first Detroit run in the second inning, and two more came home on Don Wert’s home Errors by Al Kaline, Wert and George Thomas aided White Sox in another three-run rally in the „ third and they-stayed in front the rest of the way. - Manager Bob Swift, somewhat quieter after seeing his team from a guy whose job he’s des- ®url Battey had lose for the third straight time, tined to take over. The teacher is Joe Adcock. also connected. A burly 23-year-old first base-man with the Lps Angeles Angels, Shockley holds great admiration for 37-year-old Adcock. “What a guy that Joe is,” Shockley enthused. “I guess cwcsgo you’d say he took me under his wing this spring when I came to; Angei camn and has taught me plenty 1 oevlTand' about baseball.” Shockley, who has been alternating with Adcock, a 16-year major league veteran, at first base for the Angels this season, has had a rugged start in the American League since coming TODAY’S Boston Washingtdn Kansas City .350 Minnesota 7, Battimore 3 Washington 4, Kansas City 3 Chicago 10. Detroit A New York 5, Cleveland 3 Los Angeles 7, Boston 1 Today's Gamas Chicago (Buzhardt 3-0 and Horlen 1 said he was reluctant to take McLain out of the game. , “Freehan said he was moving the ball around real good,” Swift explained. “They were just hitting him.” Ed RakoW, Gladding and Larry Sherry folloiyed, the young McLain to the mound. Robinson’s fourth single of the game, a wild pitch and a single by Bill Skowron produced the final White Sox run in the eighth inning. It was the first run given up by Sherry in 14 and two-thirds innings this season. The Tigers complete their current home stand tonight with a twi-night doubleheader against the White Sox. Mickey Lolich the day in regular singles with ) Byers and Hull debated the a 632. St. Paul’s Jim Partin had j issues in an unusual head-to-the day’s best all events total!head meeting arranged by the * 1 National Academy of Sports, TUESDAY'S FIGHTS gymnastics, w r e^ 11 i n g and j swimming. W. pniiaittlphla, 4. mu A .1 SACRAMENTO, Calil. - Jfjus PImen- Ihe NCAA, comprising the t«l. 120, Mexico, knockea out Rey Cole- major colleges, is asking an|'"sAN'josE^Taiit.^'M^^^^ equal voice .at least in running i ii', I Heclor Agv deal for Bo Belinsky. ADVICE PAYS OFF But Tuesday night Adcock’s (m*”' advice began to pay off for Shockley, who belted his first home run — a grand slammer—• in support of another ex-Phillie, rookie Marcfelino’ Lopez. Shockley’s blast, plus the six-hit pitch: ing of Lopez, who notched his third win, enabled the Angela to stop Boston 7-1. “Joe’s always giving me tips on pitchers and what pitches to look for,” he said. . Shockley had managed only a^x hits in 40 times at bat prior to Tuesday night. New York (Ford ry 3-1), night Baltimore (Barber 1-3) (Pascoal 2-0), night Boston (Lonborg 0-1) at Los An Way )-1), night Only games scheduled. Thursday's Gamas Baltimore at Minnesota New York at Cleveland, night Kansas City at Los Angeles, night. Only games scheduled. at cie»eiantf (Ter-' and Davc Wickersham were Minnesota' elated to try to snap the Tigers out of their longest losing streak of the campaign. Chicago .8 9 .4 San Francisco 9' .11 -4 Philadelphia 8 10 .4. Pittsburgh 7 13 .31 New York 7 13 .3 ■ Tuasday's Ratidls Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 3 New York 2, Philadelphia 1 Milwaukee 9, Houston 3 ' Los Angeles 8, Cincinnati 8 San FranclsM 9, St'. LOuis 2 Ward 3b 4 2 2 0 Demetar cf Skowrpn 1b 5 2 3 3 Freehan c McCraW. 1b 0 0 0 0 Thomas If Romano e * * ■ ” Martin c Peters p < » u u Wills p 2 0 0 0 Wilhelm p 10 0 0 Totals 31 to 13 4 0 McLalna p 10 0 2 O-'*- * 0 0 0 Si N'rihr'p ph 1 0 OJp S 34 4 9‘4 303 201 010-.10 030 too 011-4 Cash, Kaline, Wart, rliomas Rakow. DP—Chicago 1, LOB—Chicago 8, Detriidt 8. Pittsburgh ( V .0-3) at Chicago (B^hl i In other American L e a g u e games. New York edged Cleveland 5-3« Washington stopped Kansas City 4-2, and Minnesota belted Baltimore 7-3. Tony Oliva capped a fiveTun Philadelphia (Bunning Y6rk (Spahn 2-1), night Houston (Farrell 3-1) at _______ ________ . .. ............ Wilhelm doyrski 2-1), night , McLain'L, LOs Angeles (Koutax 2-1) at Cincinnati Rakow (O'Toole 0-3), night j Gladding . 2 2 0 2 2 Pittsburgh at Chicago . Los Ahgeles at Cincinnati, twillghi ters. Sherry, game n . * 751. faced 4 men in 3rd. ■--»-*By Peters (Thomas). wP-Pa-......... ““ “--"n. T-2:12. A-3,- I t 1 ’ -I rilK PONTIAC' Wp.dnicsdav. ma.v n. Major League Boxes NBW YOBK CLBVBLAND ■brh bl ■hi fiLofwl rf 1 10 Howtar 4 hich ion Ib 4 I I g Hinton c» 4 Paollono lb 4 1 1 J Wntfhor If 4 ^ ' Colayllo ff J MoK'llto cl 0 0 0 g Alvis 3I> 3 iroih cl 3 0 0 0 noyiillllu i,f I . . „ Kijlil.lt M ■ 4 I 0 I Wf.lltl«lil Mi 3 I i 3 nn I 1 0 1 0 0 5. km*'* V)!“w7.iim^ I r Nlghl 0 :ifCO I PHILAPBLPHIA NBW VOBK Roloi cl *3 o'o'o Kl b V Hi? e'i'b i???cW? Voii 18 Sgrrc" '* 8?88 pSC" HHSC‘:ii!! t;&'T.,tti? NoW Im So iT: i Thomai, Muni, pP Pl.llinlol|g(il|^ I, n V York I, LOB I i-^40bnMin, BB BB to l?i H«rb«rl L, 12 '**'^^'on«r*'*/«(»(l 4 nwi In M WP Jackiiim, I 3:40, a I/,3JI. PITTfBUROH CHICAOO ■b r h M ab r h bl lodoara ii 4 10 0 Bockorl 2b 4 110 Mrcfon cf S I 1 0 Ajlmnn if 2 2 0 0 vay Mi I 1 I 0 A 0 I d w 2 2 4 S ' I /Mtiia' li' 2 0 0 0 G”br"U'n" rl 3 6 I 6 I Ballay 3b 3 0 10 Pana it 4 0 10 11 Paoll'iml c 2 0 0 0 Barlall c 3 0 0 0 |M.Baan|. > » 0 0^ BrJjjM I 000 f p 1 0 0 o| ’l»\ ! 0 I 0 I Pllliburgb Chicago 6- Rod.. Pliliburgh 14 » n f Talalt Maliona 3li 3 0 0 0 Povlier ^1) I I Braisoud it 3 0 2 0 Fregoi.1 it 4 0 Ryan ( 4 0 0 0 Rortoori r. 4 I Morah'tt p 0 0 0 0 Scl.aal 3b 3 0 LOB Boilon 7, lot Anyalai 4. 211 Groan. HR Gioon (3), ! y I. SB Rodgari. S. Lopoi. DIorkar p Toialt Houilon Northern Wins 7th Straight Ponliaa Norlhern ran its sea-soii rp.(‘oi(l to 7-0 yps(«r e d St, Michael, 4-3 and Avondale (hini(M‘d ^■|t7.ge|■ald, 4 I. Tom Laverdiire chased home two runs in the first inning for PNII with a triple and the Huskies added single runs in the foiirlli and sixth frames to wrap it up. Don Kickard struck out II and was only one out away from a no-hitter when Jim Mlsch lined a double in the top of the seventh It was the losers lone hit. Hud Williams collected three hits for Walled Lake and Fred l‘'ergu>ion picked up two safeties aii'l kiuM'ked In two runs. Halpl) Landry hanged out two hits and cliased in two runs to lead St. Frederick. Tlie winners scored the winning run in the fourth. Pontiac Central ran its season record to 4-3 witli a 12-5 decision over Kettering JadK-——« Nloklaus W^GOLF .tf'.iINf- A L^ONe’ MniCK. )o -fW£. (SkieeA-rp'^-r Ac?-- V'AN-r'AI7|- IAN(-P. _ . . -7/VA' o\.p\^ -Yii>; rep^ON II IP HAKl^l, K -II ||. (A‘-F. WMIC.M (C-iipf’Ok.' u . I I II*-, -IWFOR'/ •'illA i iHI yrxiuc^t'K yt?u c,iAi-.-c , IM OOPPy •Il l|:. PI I n K./ iA7>7.VWK> Tunes Up for Colonial Dawdling on Greens Hurts Golf-Corcoran NEW YORK (AP) - Golf is dragging itself Into Uie grave by allowing Uh) much dawdling arffund on the greens, says I^rcfl (3)rcoran, pointing an nccuslng finger at the U.S. Golf AssiK’la tion. "The pjirent iMsly opened the d(M)r wide to the plddlers find lh»‘ pi (MiasUnatoiH wlien they clwmgf-d tlie rules to permit hall mai king on the green," he adds ‘‘We re moving steadily to-j ward a five-hour round of golf.” i Corocoran, the hull-neckiHl I Irishman from Hoston who built Hie PiofeHsloiial Golfers Association lour into a milliondollar hi I ind then moved to the director’s post In tlie Iiilerna-tlonal Golf Association, lakes a long, hard look at the game in a liook he lias just writlen, Un-[ilayalile Lies. Till' well-known impresario Is piqued mostly liy Hie rules wliich permit golfers to pick up llic liall on the green and clean M I: H^1 LOS AN6BLES R RR an SO SI. Mkhatl 101 010 0^ SI. Frtdtrick 120 100 K- STANTON, Taylor (2) and f’a Sanders on Golf Talking Spree it after every putt. Three pufts-three separate cleaning jobs, cimi.s i)i‘ ‘’From lee to green, golfein are moving Just about as swiftly tislay as Hiey did In Hie days nf Hagen and Hanizen," Coreornn eoiiHtiuirs. "Hut on the putting siirfiK'e Hie game curls up and dies. "Now everyhiHly marks and pli'ks up his hall and walks around H’s a kind of slow mo lion liallel. Fiicli player, in turn, marks Ids liall and wanders away, A A A "Some Ihrow the hall to Hie caddie wiio takes a big towel and massages it. Wlien it comes time to putt, eacli player returns and carefully tecs up his hall on the green and begins a stately liitial that involves a lot of stalking alioiit and sigliHiig” Corcoran added that he re-memhensi when a player nevi'r picked np a liall on the green unless it blocked niioHier player’s lie and not even tlieii when tlie stymie rule was in force. WAN’rS STYMIE "Tlie stymie ought to be brought hack," he insists, "I .say: Get ’em off the pulling green to the next lee -and let’s save the game of golf” CINCINNATI 1 Fbirly rt 2 10 0 Coleman Lelebvro 2b 5 I I 2 Shamsky Kennedy 3b 0 0 0 0 Johnson I Ferrara II 3 0 12 Edwards T'cewski 3b 4 0 0 0 Cardene. I Brewer p**'’ I 0 ph DP - Baltimore Clndall, Versalies. . — Ballay (I), OIT McA/lullen 3b 4 110 Causey ss 4 0 11 Lock cl 4 0 11 C'pan'rls If 2 0 11 Howard |f 2 0 0 0 Mathews cf 4 0 0 1 Held rl 4 0 10 Har'Ison rl 4 111 Slevers lb 2 2 2 0 H'berger rl 0 0 0 1 Chance Ib 2 0 0 0 Gentile Ib 4 0 11 McCabe c 4 0 0 I Charles 3b 3 111 Hamlin ss 4 110 Bryan t 4 0 2 Orleaa p 2 0 0 0 O'D'gh'e p 10 0 1 Wa’s'hln In ^ ” Kansas City 010 100 0 Washlnoton’^'2, l^ansas • clly *T L Wrtsh'nalon 7, Kansas City 7. 2B .Slevers, Causey. 3B Bryan, I Charles. SB -Canapanerls 2. S Orlea IP H R ER Rldl?k 12 3 10 0 O'D'ah'e L, 1-3 4 5 3 2 Sheldon 3 2 11 Slock 2 2 0 0 SP—O'Donoghue. PB—Bryan. State Commission Snubs Questions I 2B W. Dflvifi. HR '/4. Dtivli (3), Lp-fpbvrf (2), Hfirpftr (2), Plnwxn (4), Cole mr»n (4). SB Wlllii. S FAlrly. SP Roie> ’ IP H R ER BB SO J«v L, M n 7 B 0 B 7 McCool I 1 0 0 0 0 Jay fftM 2 men in 95h. HBP—By Jay, WMIaj By Dryadalt. Plnwn. T~2:30. A -9.B7S. 'GTO Tiger' Is Featured at Dragway BOSTON (AP) - The Massachusetts Boxing Commission apparently has decided it won’t be bothered anymore with Suffolk County Dist. Ally, Garrett H. Byrne and his questions about the May 25 heavyweight title fight between champion Cassius Clay and challenger Sonny Liston.. ' , Byrne, whose jurisdiction includes the site of the fight,. Boston Garden, has refused to take ‘‘no’’ for an answer to questions conceming legality of the promotion of the bout. j The commission' turned ovqr j Byren’s inquiries Tuesday to j Atty. Gen Edward W. Brooke | and told Byrne “any further j inquiries relative to the Clay-Listomfight must lie referred to the attorney general.’’ The attorney, general’s office has shown little, if any interest in the fight or any possible legal ramifications. A five race challenge match between East Coast champion Chevy driver Malcolm Durham of Washington I),C. and the National champion Ramcharger l)odgc with Jim Thornton of Royal Oak in the pilot seat highlights the switch to night racing at Detroit Dragway Saturday, May 8. ★ ★ ★ - As an added attraction, the opening of night racing will be “GTO Tiger” night — complete with souvenier tiger tails to all pit entries, free records, and a chance to race a GTO Tiger in competition with the “Mystery Tiger." Hurst 4-Speed Shifter has been posted as the prizie for beating the “Mystery Tiger’’ and, win or lose, the lowest E.T. (elapsed lime) in competition with t h e “Tiger” totes home a record player along with his trophy. Pontlic Noiiharn 7M lOI IF- 4 7 I Walarferd MO 000 #- 2 J FRVe, Haywnrd (61 .ind Mdauuhlln t MtGUFFBY And DaiiI, I Western Michigan 1 Snaps U-M Streak KALAMAZOO (AID - Ed Staron smashed three hits in four trips, including a homer and a double, and drove in four runs as Western Michigan ended Michigan’s college baseball winning streak at 10 games Tuesday, 8-2. i’hc Broncos knocked Wolverine pitcher Bob Reed from the mound in the second inning. Western clipped Reed and relievers Bill Wahl and Joe Kerr for 1,2 hits in taking its ninth victory in 12 games. The loss was Michigan’s eight in 19 games. ()huck Kline and Eric Hall held the Wolverines to six hits. Hall got credit for the victory. Michigan 001 100 000 2 6 2 Weslern Michigan Ml 020 21x 8 12 2 Read, Wahl (21, Kerr (7) and SUemore; Kline, Hall (4) and HMetToa. W-Hall. L Reed. ^ Softball Tryouts Slated Motorcar Transport will hold softball tryouts Saturday at 2 p.m. at Jaycee Park field No. 2. Persons interested may call manager Bud Strong, FE 4-6371, for further information. FORT WOHTII, Tex (API It was windy and cloudy and there at the prncliee tee was I dapjier Doug Sanders, elaborating on such inteiTiational topics as single-blessednes's, | eigarelles. Las Vegas and whirlpools. 'rile tousle haired young man ' in the sparkling gold slacks also ' skipped eonversalionally across lh(* perils of golf and Hie wizardry of Arnold Palmer. Occasionally, he worked in a practice shot, although the scores of siK^ctators apfieared content just to listen not look. Down along the Trinity River bank strode Palmer, his army at his heels, as he turned up for the $100,000 Colonial National Invitation beginning Thursday. “Palmer is hitting his irons so well that he knocked his caddy down in the practice area the other day," Sanders reported, “and hit him thr?e more times before he could get up.’’ SAME KIND Detecting a hacking cough among his audience, Sanders quipped: “You must smoke the same kind of cigarettes 1 do” He continued: “You know, I quit drinking, and now 1 am smoking more. Palmer quit smoking, and now he’s drinking more. I don’t know which is worse” The conversation, considerably one-sided, drifted to Las Vegas and its Tournament of Champions, where Sanders three days ago earned with third place. The galleries at the desert city are not among the most g 0 I f indoctrinated, Sanders | mUSLHt. “Tlierc are two classes of ih'o pie IIk'It. PePple who drink atid are winning and jwople who drink and are losing. If they are winning, they’re happy. * * * “If they are losing they don’t care at«)ut anything” Sanders, plagued with recurring back and shoulder aliments, has moved temporarily into a plush apartment house near Dallas, which is equipped with a whirlpool. The whirlpool therapy relaxes him, Sanders said, and is good for his various ills. “I just walk down from my apartment each day and juiiq) in. " Sanders, a single man, replied ‘ when somebody asked if he were married, “No. Am 1 going to get married? No. Do 1 want j lo gel married? No. Do 1 want to have fun? Yes” Jack Nieklaus, who was figured lo be one of the favorites ifi the tournament, decided not lo compete but lo remain home instead in Columbia, 0 h i o, where his wife was expected to give birth lo a baby at any lime. Corocoraii, a friend of princes and indiisirial tycoons and Hdviser to s|MirtB (‘haliiplons, rcvlewiKl his more than threw decades with the fairway sport, t * 4 In his own personal ilafl of Emiie, he named Hen Hogan us Hie greutent professlonai and Hob Jones as the outstanding amiiteur of all-time. Balie Dl-drik.son Znharlas wils the iin-mntchnhle queen of the s|Mirt, the Masters the best tmirnn-meiit and Augusta National Iho greatest course. HARNESS RACING IONITE 8.30 P.M. TVrw 1'»(h l>aeM* [Rat. GA l-7l7o] II olrfrin* Raceway al the ^ DETROIT RACE COURSE SCHOOLCRAFT •nS MIDDLHtLT BRIDGESTONE/j, Head Coach Named KALAMAZOO lAS-Hob Barringer, line coach al Kalamazoo Loy Norrix High ScIkkiI for five years, has lieeii named head eoaeh. He succeeds Reese Protz, who asked reassignment in the school system after five years as Loy Norrix head coach. Titans Elect Cocaptains ITETKOIT (4V-The University of Detroit basketball team has elected Lou Hyatt and Doric Murrey ewaptains for the 1965-66 season. COMPLETE LINE OF BRIDGESTONES ON DISPUY STARTING ^239^^ WITH ONLY $25.00 DOWN Paul A. Young, Jr^ 4030 Dixiu Highway Drayton Plaint OR 4-0411 'Atta Boy' in Feature at Hazel Park Track T. A. Grissom’s “Atta Boy" will try for his 4th victory in his last seven starts in the featured seventh racil, a one-mile claiming event for four-year-olds and up, at the Hazel Park Thursday afternoon. The chestnut son of “At Home” posted a victory at Hialeah and two at Oaklawn Park last winter. He finished 4th to Missille Miss, a IRtle better than three lengths off the pace, in his first outing at Hazel Park last week. 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VVICDNKSDAV, MAY 5. iimfl Gridder Declines i: Sluggers Lonely in Milwaukee Park 'Good' Lion Offer BOSTON (AIM - The writers were a llltle slarlled lo hear Syracuse fullback .liru Nance aay he declined a more lucf a live offer from Del roil of the Nallonal l''(N)thall Leamie lo sign with lldston of iltr junior American l''(N)|lmll Deague However, Nance’s reasons show«'d he had given Ihe mailer •friols play Buffalo for Ihe Kasl-ern Division championsliip on lelevisioM Iasi laJI and "II wi easy Ip see lliarlhev needed fullback ’’ He said he saw "a opportunilv lo slep in and win a lo sign wilh the I'alriols Tis of Indi Chicago big moi; icv In Ihe fulure” Nhii?^<' ■ .said lie al.Mo is known In llic F, a.sl (or WI esiliiig, liavlng won 93 oul III Ilf collegiale malclu'.' i and taking Iwo NCAA hc(IV\ M’( •ighi wie slling elmiii|)l onshi,.. * * * "'I’hiil is anollie ■r ()lus for Ros- Bears of Ihe NFL gavj» him Ihe [ royal IrealinenI unlil Ihey pnlil decided he wasn'l loo inleresl-cd. He said Delroll received permission lo dicker and piade an offer heller Ihiin Ih.il offered by the Palriols ' ’’Bui I wasn't inicrcsied in Ihe greater return this year," Ihe (i flus values in Bos m;i:i> Iu.i.bai kkb He said he watched Ihe f’a said. "I'd have a liirn prolessioiial as a ler in Ihe off sea,son” | Boslon is oni- cily In which professional wr»‘slling Is still verv much alive, "Actually, 1 could have signed i for more money in Detroit over Ihe next few months,he' summed up, "hnl from an over, all, long range progiiim, I could do much heller right here in Bo.slon " LiPBTIMi OUAIIANTal - ilmt Nm Tr«»a eiM Tan “ ■ Trtatfal r M-t»T. M UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 Mm, Ftom Downtown Pontine HAPI'Y COAdl Palriols coach and general manager, Mike Holovak, was elated with the announcement of his new signing, "We've always needed the hig fullback and now we have him," he said Defenses will he more | honest and Babe Parilli (Pa-1 triols’ quarterback) will now have stronger pass blocking. He solves one of my three major concerns for next /all," Nance was picked 19th in Ihe AFL draft and he was picked fourth by the Bears, Tile delay before Nance signed with Boston was due lo his wrestling He wanted to be eligible to successfully defend his NCAA championship Stands Almost Bare as Braves Whip Astros Hank Aaron, Mathews Produce Home Runs in 9-3 Triumph By The Assiwiiited Press Hank Aaron and F'iddie Mathews, Milwaukee's record-set-1111“ home rm twins, are hase-hall’s lonelicMt longdistance billers, Aaron and Malhews, who have combined for Ihe most homers hv two teammates in National I.eague hi.story,,,added lliree mori' Tuesdav night as the Alhmia-h'imul Bravis whipped Houston li-.'l before l)i:i (laying cuslomers smallest liirnoul in Ihe clnh’s 111 year Milwaukee FAMIUAK HOLK - Catcher Yogi Berra, who starred behind the plate for the New York Yankees for year.s and who managed the Yanks last year, made his debut as catcher for the New York Met.s last night in a 2 1 victory over Philadelphia, Above, Berra congratulate,s pitcher Al Jack.soil, who .set a Mets' learn mark with 11 strikeouts in the game, Berra (licked up a (lair of singles In the contest. NOISY CASSIUS World heavywelglil chanqiion Ca,ssius Clay and Iraincr Bmuiini Browne (right i sound off with Iheir war ci y, "Float like a hullerfly sling like a h(>e," during a (insss conference at Clay’s Iralning , cam)) in Chiciqiee, Ma; III training al Chico()ee ex-lilljst Sonny 1-islon, The bout i May 2fi at Boslon Carden, Waterford, Oxford Win Go To Or O I o For Your GTO and SAVE at... RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 9 M>24, Lake Orion 693-R266 Track Schedule Heavy Ticket Request Heavy for Annual Buick Open Waterford and Walled Lake and KM) Bulledge look bolh hur-,sle()pcd oul of Iho Inler-Lakcs fik's and McDowell was first in L-t; ague yesterday lo record track victories, I^Uke (iarrels won the hroad The Skippers edged Can- 'ow hurdles and h I ({h L xr and Bochesler brook, 59-50, and Walled Lake " ''’K Olher schools joining the host will l)e Avondale, Fitzgerald, Lam()here, Troy, Northvillc, Clarkslon, Fenton, Borneo, Bad GBAND BLANC (il>v--A deluge i sped past Milford, 71-:)8, Brigh-i winning HHO relay team to of advance ticket inquiries in- '<>«’« victory in the mile relay fipiTk Walled fjtke. dicate an attendance record K^^e the Wildcats a 5(i-5.’f win Walled l.akc and Walcrford may be set in the $100,000 eighth over West Bloomfield’ are lop contenders for I-l. track annual Buick Open golf tourney * * * honors In a recent edition it next month, tournament offi- Oxford beat Kettering for the was erronesously reported that dais said Tuesday, Last year’s second time tliis spring, 70''i-62, <^>'ol mccis count toward the attendance at the Open - 48,695 in a triangular that includt>d La- • track crown. The champion-is an all-time mark for pro- peer with 4*'Si: ^bip is determined only by the fessional golf in Michigan, This Tom Hoke, Mark Rutledge and league meel, year’s tournament will be Dick McDowell led Waterford’s i Oxford warmed up (or its big played June 3-6. ti iumph, Hoke won the shot put invitational relays this Saturday PUT A TIGER IN YOUR GARAGE FOR %5! Don't Just''Roar'" by Stop In . . . The Pontiac Retail Store^ I While Ihe attendance figure , di()|)ed l)elow I,(M)() for the first I time ever at County Stadium, Aaron, witli Iwo homers, and I Malhews, will) one, boosted I llieir record Iota! as leammates I lo 749, four more than Gil j Hodges and Dukp Snider hit I while playing together for the Brooklyn-i.o.s Angeles (lodgers. Th(‘ Malfiews Aaron run be-when Hank joined the club 1954, one year after Kddie hmf wliacked 47 homers in his firslN/ull season. The major league thmk belongs lo Yankee greats RahKUuth and Lou Gehrig, who teamed up for 870 circuits from 1923 fhrwgh 19,'f4, Yogi Berra, starfmu his first National League game”^ngled lwic(> and scored Ihe de run in Ihe New York Mel victory over Philadelphia, San Francisco ripped St, Louis 9-2 behind fwo-run homers l>y Jesus Alou, Willie Mays and Jim Hart, TTK-BRKAKKR Berra Puls on Glove lo Help Met Victory > * FOR A TIGER OF A DEAL AND THE MOST EXCITING ADVENTURE OF YOUR LIFE ... DO IT TODAY! Top Trade-In and Quick Cash for Your Present Car • Big Savings THEflE MUST BE A REASON: ' On the Spot Financing Store 6S Mi. ClMcens St. Downtown Pontiac FE 3-7951 Willie Davis’ tic-breaking ninth-inning single paced the Los Angeles Dodgers to an 8-6 victory over Cincinnati and Pittsburgh slugged the Chicago Cubs 6-3 as Willie Stargell and Jerry Lynch each homered twice, Aaron’s third and fourth 1965 homers and Mathews’ sixth complomentcd the five-hit'pitching of Tony Cloninger at Milwaukee, Cloninger didn’t allow a hit until Joe Morgan doubled with one out in the sixth Inning and Ihe Braves in front 7-0, NEW YORK (AP) - Yogi Berra came barrk Tuesday night and tlie New York Met fans loved it. With his 40th birthday just around the corner, pexl WednC.sday, the old boy'^rahbed the mitt and eanghi the full nine innings in the Mets’ 2-1 victory over the I’hillies, Hiticss in spring training and in one pinch hitting try last Saturday, Yogi came through with two base hits and trundled home from second base on a hopper through the infield. I that one writer eallerl a "run batted out.’* With Ed KranepodI on sec'ond and Joe Cliristopher on first and one run in, Berra singled to center in the first, Althougli Christopher was cut down at third, for the lliird out, everybody assumed Krane[)ool had scored tlie second run of Ihe Inning, It was posted on the scoreboard and remained up there for a half an inning, until, • the umpires ruled the out had been made at third before Kra-nepool crossed the plate. Pole VeuM-Clemens (WB), Ferouson (WB), Slenson (WB) 9-0 Hlg)i Jump—Mossogrove (B), Devls and Nlc)iolson (WB) Tied 5-4 Jump-rFaulkner (B), HunI (WB), Kaltenback (B) )e-))Vi 860 Reiay—BrlB)iton Time: );43 Mile Ruh—Faleschinl (WB), Bair (B), Burke (WB) Time: 5:1.04 High Hurdles- Hayne (B), Davis (WB), N(cholson (WB)" Time: 15.9 000 Run—Kovalic ,(WB), Evanson (B), Kaltenbacir (B) Time: 2:tJ,)3 440 Run—Mallby (B), Campbell (WB). TDser (WB) Time: 55.9 100 Dash—Koiaklewfcz (B), Hollier (WB), Faulkner (B) Time: 11.2 Low Hurdles—Nicholson' (WB), Grob (WB), Davis (WB) Time: 22.5 230 Run—Kozaklewicz (B), Bair (B), Clemens (vyB) Time: 24.0 Mile Relay—Brighlon Time: 3:44 The (wo homers gave Aaron .’170 for his career, tying Hodges for 12th (josilion on the all-time list. Mathews, with 451, is ninth. The Giants cha.sed S(. Louis start,er Ray Sadecki in the first inning, with Alou and Mays,unloading before the left-hander could retire a batter. Juan Mar-ichal, 4-2, checked the Cardinals on six hits, including a homer by Ken Boyer. THIRD HIT Willie Davis’ third hit of the game, off Cincinnati reliever Bill McCool in the ninth, followed successive walks to Maury Wills and Wes Parker by starter Joey Jay and gave the Dodgers a 7-6 lead. John Rosd-boro’s sacrifice fly delivereid an insurance run. Jim Lefebvre’s eighth-inning homer had pulled LA even. W.Mtd L.k. 7), Milford 31 Shot Pul—Andrews (M), RumlnskI (WL), GriOen (M). 49-9', Long Jump—Gorrels (WL), Dunham (,M), MItich (WL). 20-8'/j 800 Relay-Walled Lake (PlaskowskI, Hughes, Garrels, Godfrey). ):33.4 4:37.4 Stargell’s second homer, a three-run „ shot in the ninth, decided the, Pirates-Cubs afternoon game. Lynch homered in the second inning and he and Stargell hit consecutive circuits in the sixth for a 3-2 Pittsburgh margrn. The Cubs tied in the eighth on Ron Santo’s run-scoring .single. 'liHJ man who was fired a.s managhc()f the New Ycirk Van kces last mil after winning the pennant: ana\|osing the World Series in seven gmnes, darling of the MeK/ans. They tooted their horns, souhded their trumpets and whooped ir the veteran. Berra said he had asked Mat^ ager Casey Stengel to let him catch.“I might ns. well find oul if I can do it,” lie said. "1 haven’t played nine innings since I don’t know when.” (Actually it was Sept. 21, 1963). When a writer asked Berra if he had been nervous about the possibility that he might have a bad night and embarrass himself, Berra .said, “Naw. You think I never played before'.' I just wanted to go and find out if I could,” FIRST HIT Slcngcl was aglow with pride in his old catcher. "He did a very good job catching that fella (Al Jackson). How about that first hit. The poor guy hadn’t got a hit all spring and he gets one and they don’t score the I Pistons Search I for Guard in 1 NBA Drafting Casey referred to an incident DETROIT (AP) -ExccutIvB Manager Don Wattrick indi-ated Tuesday the Detroit Pis-would make a trade for a top fBghL play-making guard at the Natibnal Basketball Association’s annual draft meeting Thursday. ‘‘Several clu&Sk have approached us on deaR\so something well could happefKin the next 48 hourS,” Wattrick^^id before he and scout Earl Ll(i^ left for New York. The Pistons have ahx'ady announced that they will select All America Bill Bunlin of Michigan as Iheir lerrilorial draft choice. As last-place finishers in fhoir respccti/e divisions. New York and San Francisco each will get two first-round choices before any of the other clubs can make a regular choice. The Pistons will draft in third spot. 220 Qunliflm Mil? Relay.-\ . Woodard) 3:43.5 Spence (WL), 12-3 Rainstorm Doesn't Prevent EMU Victory YPSILANTI (AP) Eastern Michigan splashed through a raihstorm. that stopped the Women Goffers Open Campaign at Silver Lake Mrs. Jean Looney grabbed top honors yesterday as the Women’s Silver Lake Golf League opened the 1965 season. M%. Looney turn^ in an actual ^7 for the low score of the baseball game three times and ‘‘ay an^oigjhe 42 ladies on hand. defeate(i Wavne State 9-6 in a "All I said was; Shovt me a filter that delivers the taste and I'll eat my hat." Pre.sidenf’s Athletic Ponference game Tuesday. Piaster ns Ken Mir two^run homer in the third in- Sharif the lead with low net 40s in the first (light were Madeline Castciherry and R a c h e 1 bi'lled a Bevisly Sharing honors ih the second flight with net 39s were ning. He was backed up by i Pat Hoover and Mary Turner, teammate Dave Henegar who i Alene Harrous wound up with a was 3-for-4 at the plate. I net 43 to pace the third /light. Ea^stern is 3-3 for the season. Six players tied (or low put-Wayne is 2-6. ' ting honors with 16. Made in premium-tire molds,' this tire [|u|| 1 shonldsell forsSO! ^^|||| ,• MmOIw «44«.,*vif ||„; 4,p|y nylon, prtmuni (uturnl^^^^lF k ALL HIES ^ (•miwUtMuri) m FE 2-0121 it ! I “ ■‘>1 THE I’ONTfAC PUKSS. WKDNKSDAV. MAV X nm Hi|ls, Central Win Tennis Milford'l Golf String at Nino Victories Bk)<)iiifieUl IIHIs’ tennis team knlf course, Mllfonl downed West llloontfield 163-169, ami itlmimflcld Hills p4»st-ed a 152-166 victory over Holly. Milford, now 9-0, was led by Pete Castle with a 35. Fred Hall eard(sd a 40 for West Hloom-field. Scott Springer turned In a 35 over the Korcsl Ulkc Country Club courHC for the winning Hills' s(|uad. fAe Out4wt Tfail with DON VOGEL-Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Preii Adds Biologist I J«cot», 44, 7-5, 4 Ji niH (OM) (lot Jim AAlke RIohle SlngUi (R) def Dnv« Gotlll«b, Klolheda (h) dirt Gory *-«; Wn» SchuMl (HMI , 4-2, 42; Rick RoWpion Wll»y, 4 3, 4-0. i Carrier (Bill !>» Duller, 42. I I nu (DHI del PCH 7, Seglnew I ijVt; nluce^'B^gbr^' s (PCH) del. Chrli Ml y. 41, 4 0; Ron l ewU ; (PCH) del. Dove ( Tiger Averages I ER RBI Pci *1 ’J 'S y—Include* ellchert. Kach year al«)u1 this lime, the popping bug starts Jts reign as king of fishing lures on area lakes. This cork or ruhiMir Ixalied fly lakes more large bUiegills during May and early June than any other spring ball. And nv ports are starting to filler in that bluegills are hitting on the surface. ON TAIMilST Roger (,'huiKlclainc, 14 of 40.5 Upland, recently won the men’s amateur freestyle sluKit in the International Open at Delroit with .560 of a possible to points. Had he been shooting with the 800 pros in the tournament, he would have placed fifth. First Salmon Plant at Torch Lake Ciovernor Ceorge Romney will make the first planling of koka-, nee salmon ever to be stocked I in Michigan waters during ceremonies May 27 at Torch Cake. The governor this wirek accepted an invitation from Con-.servation Director Ralph A. MacMullan to relea.se the first pailful of young salmon at Uie mouth of Wilkin.son Creek on the northeast shore of the lake. shore grounds of the Conservation Training .Sehool. In all, about 2'/: miUittn koka- Popping Bugs Start Annual Spring Reign District Staff 1 H. C. Greene Named to Pontiqc Lake Post Rluegllls have started to move Into shallow water for spawn-In,;. Fishermen report fair sue cess on Lakeville, Cirahum and Stringy lakes with popptus. Some crappies also are being taken. Rainbows are hilling on Kli/.a belh. Union, Oxbow and Pine lakes Fishermee are taking rain-bow.s 14 III tni'hes al Pine u.sing small .silver spoons and a Hartig lure. Rig crappies up lo 15 inches also are moving at Pirn*. FKCH HITINd Perch averaging eight lo ten incher.s eontiniat to draw anglers to (,'aseville. The run at Ihirbor Reach has slowest the last five days. The fish, however, are still on the small side. Saucer-sized gillfi will he hitting within about 10 days. Trout fisihing in the county continues \o be .slow. The streams and special flies only |X)nds are iibout fished ou' and the best locations from now until the end of .lime will be lakes. nge fry are expect i to be Fish Story Has Catch The kokance, now being raised at the department’s Oden and Harrietta hatcheries, will be about two inches long when released. 'Ihey have hatched from eggs obtained form Colorado and Washinlon. Torch is one of two lakes chosen for the initial introduction of the kokance, a landlocked form of the Pacific sockeye salmon. The other is Higgins, and it will be stocked at about the same time. The Higgins Lake planting site is on the north VERONA, N. J. (AP)‘-Jim Degnan’s fish story had a catch in it. What turned up on the end of the line while he fished in Verona Lake Sunday was a wallet. Not just an ordinary wallet. It was Degnan’s wallet —the one he lost while fishing in the lake less than a year before, he said. When he opened the billfold, he found a few waterlogged dollar bills and credit cards still intact. turned loose in the two lake this spring during the first phase of a four-year program which has as its goal permanent establishment of the species In Michigan as a [Ripular game fish. SPAWNING BY 1969 If the fry stocked this spring prosper, they can be expected to grow into mature spawners by the fall of 1969, according to Howard A. Tanner, chief of the Department’s fish section. Kokanee salmon probably will be about 14 inches long and weigh a pound or so at maturity in Michigan. The departmi^nt also is working with another Pacific salmon, the coho (silver). Coho fry-are being raised at Oden and Harrietta but will not be planted until they have reached finger-ling size in 1966. State's Hunting, Fishing Force Third in Nation ean’l think of iinyone who l.s alive liKlay who could verify my story,” said the 76-year-old Adams, "Rut every once In a while I hear of someone taking Lloyd Rarager, l.'l, 3046 (Caroline, Auburn Heights, look a 14-inch imreh al Caseville last )kend that weighed one pound, 12 ounces. The breakwater at (his .Saginaw Ray location was so erowih'd (hut fisbermen hud trouble keeping lines from becoming (angled. Orrie Adams, 65.39 Maybee, Independence Township, re-membens when his father and brolluT speart'd eels at .Sloiiey .ake near Oxford “around the turn of the century.” 'Hie ConBervallotl Depart-ment’s Pontiac Luke district headquarters was brought lo full strength this week with the appuliitmeiit of a game biologist. Howard C. Greene, habitat biologist for several game areas In (he Thumb, started his new duties last Monday. His u|)|>olntinent was announced by Warrdn W. .Shaplon, the department’s regional manager for .Southern Michigan. four-fooler EEL TIME “These are the kind they atch in saltwater, not (he little lamprey-like eels we have in the streams around here.” Adanis claims that the eels were planted In several lakes iirior to IINM). He said his father once s|H*ared a .seven-fooler The Press has recelvi'd no reports of eel.s taken at the lake within the last eight years and Conservation Officer Cyril Adams of Lake Orion said, “I haven't heard of any” John Roloff of Flint said an occasional eel up to four feet Is taken at Van Ellen lake near Oscwla. Adams wants to know if any eels still remain in Stoncy Lake, and if any are still being caught. So does The Press. A 17-year veteran wllli the department, Greene will be re-iponsihle for game management activities In Oakland, Macomb and Wayne (•oiinlles and tha soul h e r n part of St. Clair County. The Pontiac Lake district staff also includes parks, law and fire .supervisors, a fish biologist )ind office manager. Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s Solunar Tables. Plan your days .so that you will bo fi.shing In good territory or hunting In giKKl cover during the.se times, if you wish to find the beat sport that each day has to offer. J»c)(sonvl)le I? Toronto 2 ’ Atlanta 10, Buffalo 2 Columbus 4, Rochester 3, It Innii Syracuse al Toledo, postponed r. Michigan drew 1,740,611 11 censed sportsmen during the 1964 fiscal year to boast the third largest force of registered hunters and anglers in the nation, according lo figures tabulated by the U. S. Department of the Interior. With 842,836 firearm enthusiasts and archers in its outdoor ranks, this state finished a shade behind front - running Pennsylvania in hunter numbers Michigan’s following of licensed fishermen totaled 897,-748, good for fifth place ranking among the nation’s states. As the year before, California fielded the largest army of licensed Hunters and fishermen, while Minnesota had the second biggest total, topping Michigan’s combined figure for sportsmen. ctronic Devices 'Bug' State's The miracle olNdeclronics, which has Man reachihgfor the moon, is now being caliedsfipon ir. Michigan to play a dowi earth role in probing unknown^ about game. Under a radio telemetry project being readied by the Conservation Department, it will serve as the eyes and ears of a streamlined study aimed at tracking game movements and measuring wildlife habitat needs. To launch this study, research biologists are “bugging” 12 whitetails with transmitter-X equipped collars at the department’s Gusino wildlife research station dear Shingleton in the Upper Peninsula. After the dozen deer are released inside the station’s mile- square enclosure, biologists will tune in on their travels this spring by manning directional receivers to pick up signals from tiny transmitters powered by mercury cell batteries. the Pigeon River area of the northern Lower Peninsula. These big animals will be captured sometime this summer by looting them with sedative-lo^to darts. They will have their a® determined and sex recorded collars with transmitters are slipped around their massive necks. At the depart! Lake wildlife researbh center near East Lansing, workfeiis are re-erecting lookout towers w have been teplaced by airplanel under the fire detection program in northern Michigan. These towers will be used as listewing posts for radio telemetry studies on deer and such small game as pheasants, rabbits and squirrels. Eventually, the department expects to track whitetails in other parts of Southern Michigan, with portable receivers in aircraft. search and development section. 'However,” he goes on, “we think this project has Fed hot /us possibilities for telling /us a lot of things we still need to know about game. For one thing, our men will have instant contact with animals that have transmitters, and that will givd them a big edge in charting wildlife movements at all times.” Full Dress Grid Tilt Ends Spring Training east LANSING (AP)-Mich-igan State’s football team will wind up spring training Saturday with a full-dress game, complete with printed programs, in Spartan Stadium. The “green” team, composed of the top offensive and defensive units, will take on the “white” .squad of reserves who are eager to make an impression strong enough to win them an invitation to return for early fall drills. “This business of radio telemetry is brand new to us and we’ve already run into some Tinkles during our early exper-it 3,” says David H. Jenkins, c yoi the department’s re- Prcviously, game researchers have not known what happened to animals between the time they were first captured and later recovered by hunters or recaptured by the department. COLLEGE SCOAEBOARO Detroit 8, Notre Dam* 4 Western Michigan 8, Michigan 2 Eastern Michigan 9, Wayne Sli Track Albion 100. Adrian 34 Eastern Michigan 88, Wayne Sti Coil spring construction -bL lows air to emulate freely through cushion. Each of these electronic gadgets,' with a range of one mile or more through, heavy cover, produces a signal on separate frequencies Tor each deer so that rtoarchers will know exactly which animals they are tracking at any given time. After using the (Gusino stan^ tion’s enclosihre as a testing ground for the next year or so, the department plans to expand its radio telemeti7 study to cover deer, bear, cOyotds and possibly bobcats on wild lands in the Upper Peninsula. EI^S1T®Y . Also, department plans call . for using planes With directional receivers (about the size of wall telephones) to conduct an air-to-i ground study on elk this fall in Every Movement Electronically Recorded CUSHION tONLY $199 De Luxe Chanripioh WMtewMIs NEW TREADS retreaos on sound tire bodies or on your own tires Plus tax and 4 trada-ln tiras of saipa siza off your car. 370 South Saginow At South Exit of Wide Track Drive I. 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BAG m EMBASSY BRAND SALAD DRESSING 33^ SAVE 5- LB. 6- OZ. PKG. SELF-POLISHING / BRUCE FLOOR WAX. . .____________oljart\an79‘ us no i select v'" CRUNCHY OR SMOOTH-^ETER PAN TEA R PEANUT BUTTER ...... . . . n-OZ. WT. JAR ' / . "ROSY RED" REFRESHING TASTE t HAWAIIAN PUNCH...... 2 IJ-Fl. 01. CANS 25* . WITH COUPON^ AND $5 PILRCHASE SMOOTH AS SATIN _ Mll-O-SOFT WHITE BMAD 0 Raklna gm I'A-iB. ^■5* LOAVES Nipi MIX OR MATCH! TaIdWKH BREAD . ^s M* later cakes. .. VACUUM SEALED/WITH BUTTER SAUCf-FROZEN BIRDS EYE/UMA BEANS. .,io-oz m pkg 39* BIRDS EYE Fr/zEN TINY TATERS.............. i-u pkg 25* DELICIOUS CHOCOLATE FLAVOR BOSCO . .................. . n-OZ. WT. JAR 39* FOR FAST PAIN RELIEF BROMO SELTZER .............ivoz wt rtl 35* TASTE SO CRISP L FRESH HERMAN CLUB CRACKERS ... mb pkg 36c BIRDS EYE FROZEN-tWITH ONION SAUCE MIXEP VEGETABLES . . . . 2 S-OZ. WT. PKGS 69* ORAL ANTISEPTIC COLGATE^ 100........... . . u fl. oz. btl. 74* AMERICA'S FAVf^RITE COOKIE- NABISCO OREO CREMES . 'n-OZ. WT PKG 39* 88 SIZE CALIFORNIA k79* oranges. SWEET MELLOW ,79* GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS PICK OF SELECT CRO^. . PLUMP, NUTRITIOUS AND GOLDEN RIPE . . .^Y NOW AND SAVEI .limit qiHintiti«s. Pricki items ''elfectivc et -Kroger In Pontiec end ■ Oxford, Michigan thru | SelUrday, May I, 1965. I C.opy right 1945. The " Kroger Co. WITH THIS COUPON AND $S PURCHASE OR MORI COUNTRY CLUB ROIL BUmR mm TOP VALUE 50 STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON TWO 1-IB. PKGS. WITH THIS COUPON AND $S PURCHASE OR MORE SPECIAL label I ^uuNiKT CMia 1 KINS SHE CHEER ■ ROLL iSTOR ' |Si,y ,™,. s-LB. (S4>z. PKO. ^9* SAVE 34' I 14B. Rou 57* SAVE p 211[o'ASTINfi CHICRIRS { COVRTRT tlUB WIEMERS ■ I VoMlhiwSalVtday, M«y I, 19E5.'Umit EValrflltnifalwiUay, May B, IMS. Umil I VaMi|intSalwNl«y E Vel4 HwrwSodufUey, I onaea«|»npar>mlly. parMmlly. jMayB.IWS. ^ -^j^^B.IMS. 1/.'' THK I'ONriAC I'HKSS. WKl )N KSI )A N', MAY ,Y c^.r WITH MAILER COUPON & ^5 PURCHASE WEDGWOOD&CQ,IJD,1 Countryside DINNER PLATE! nUS 730 IXTRA TOP VAtUI STAMPS WITH ITH V COUPONS fllQM YOUR MAUSP iOOKlffT, 4TH k m RIBS RIB ROAST U.S. TENDER THRIFTY TENOERAY BEEF 69f6» LB. ISTSpS U.75® 1 IB. 69' 1ST 3 RIBS -79' I u75' LEAN MEATY SIVLRE RIBS 39* LBb ASSORTED FLAVORS-BIG "K" THIS COUPON WORTH $1 CPF TOWARDS THE PURCHASR OP THiRiE SALiUI PLATES WEDGWOOD «i CO., ITD. Rtaular Pric*...........$7.f« . 1.04 Wilh ....................$1.1 Valid thru SalOIrday, May I, 19A3, Ip—hd THRIFTY BEEF 69 lb. 67 lb. 7' THIS COUPON WORTH $1 OPP TOWARDS THE PURCHASE OP . 2 CEREAL SOUP/2 ! BREAD A BUTTER PLATES \ WIDGWOOO A CO., ItO^ • ■(•OularPrUa.........$7.99 ■ Ubb.................. 1.00 Z With Coupon......... $1.99 A Valid thru Saturday, May I, 1965. | TASTY —— — -■-■■- — Pi-1 BOBBY'S WIENERS....................3 '^« 99» GLENDALE SLICEB BOLOGNA............... 39 ,. FRESH PICNIC STYLE PORK ROAST..........................29 ,1 FRES-SHORE FROZEN fish sticks......................It/,.V79“ SEA PAK FROZEN COOKED ' HADDOCK STEAKS . . . . ............... KROGER REGULAR OR DRIP 12-FL. *•••••••02. CAN CANNED POP CHICKEN NOODLE ' CAMiPBELL^S soup KROGER BRAND ORANGE JUICE a39 SAVE 19«-2 PACKS OF 6-BORDEN'S TWIN POPSorFUDGEE$12-39 KROGER BRAND GRAPE JUICE ... 3ii-89 r*UI/^l/Clbl TUP- or- A A __ __ " VAC PAC COFFEE WILDERNESS CHERRY WITH COUPON AND ' | FILLING... 3i£89‘ CHICKEN OF THE SEA, BREAST O' CHICKEN OR PACKER LABEL APPLE SPOTLIGHT BRAND INSTANT KROGER OR BORDEN'S COTTAGE SAUCE COFFEE CHEESE #129 '»save PIE COUNTRY CLud LUNCHEON MEAT 3 "?ANs*"- PACKER'S lABEl SWEET PEAS.4i£49‘ PACKER'S LABEL SWEET CORN...sn* EASY TO PREPARE JIFFY CAKE MIX. . . . 2E25*^ PACKER'S LABEL-CUT GREEN BEANS 4i£49<= MFCH rDi«:i. •‘“’5 CLEAN BIBB lETTUCE. . „,49‘ APWEr." !?.!! 49' ........-oz..,a59- MILD COMPLEXION SOAP PALMOLIVE 4 REGULAR SIZE BARS 45* SUPER KOnX i FRESH SWEET N' JUICY FOR YOUR SPRING CLEANING JOBS AJAX LIQUID CLEANER ... ,5-fi. oz in. 39* SPECIAL LABEL RIPE \ STRAINED VARIETIES CLAPP'S BABY FOOD ....... .10 jars 89- 48-CT. PKG. WAnitMELON REMOVES DIRT QUICKLY PELS NAPTHA BAR SOAPrigular size bar 10* WITH COUPON AND ^ WITH ALMONDS-FROZEN I BIRDS EYE FRENCH beans. . 2 p-or. wt. pros. 69* $5 PURCHASE ROSY-RED AND BULGING U WITH VINE-RIPENED SWEfTNESS! I TUNA FLAVOR Inine^ives cat food 4 6-OZ. WT. CANS 49* EACH NEW! BY THE ALBERTO-CULVER COMPANY CALM DEODORANT SPRAY POWDER 4.2 OZ. WT. CAN 89 C PLUS F.E.T. 50 STAMPS^IOOSTAMPsijlS STAMPsCSO STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON I WITH THIS COUPON ON LJ WITH THIS COUPON ON U WITH THIS COUPON ON SAVE T0<-3 flavors BORDEN'S ICE MILK Ic SPECIAL LABEL 39 KROGER FLOUR 5 "-39* SAVE 6'- BORDEN'S SHERBET - 19- I ASSORTED ■ any THREE IV4.LB. IQAVES MAINE POTATOES' INSTANT COFFEE----------------------------------- ■ Valid lllru Sot.rd.y, ■ I «oWorFruri“m!MIL.O-$OrTBR|AD! S gj. ■ volid thru Saturday, ■ 4^I VoNd thru Saturday, A Iv.lid thru Soturd.y, May I, 196S. Limit I Valid thru Saturday, May t, 1?6S. Umit I ■ ■R^RIR Ra tRB flqp ■■ M RaKp!aR"lBI EH ■■■■■■ ■■■■ •• 1965. ‘‘"P^ P*'^ ^art. couparr p.r j|. I Vohd thru Saturday, ■ WITH THIS COUPON AND ” WITH THIS COUPON AND, $5 PURCHASE OR MORI | $5 PURCHASE OR MORI KROGER REGUUR OR DRIP GRIND ■ SPECIAL LABEL VAC PAC COFFEE |K0TEX SANITARY NAPKINS, IrU. CAN 65* SAVE 10* J' 48-COUNT PKG. 99* SAVE 30< ■ DESTROY HOUSEHOLD OERMS A ODORS-PINE-SCENTED LYSOL DISINFECTANT Ic S-FL OZ. BTL 59‘ FOr GEItlEIIAl OrU HVeiENE LISTERiNE ANTISEPTIC 74' 14-PL OL BTL MADE OF THE FINEST STEEL WILKINSON SWORD BLADES S-COUNT PKO. 69' CUT GREEN BEANS OR WHOLE KERNEL CDRN FEATHERWEIGHT DIETETIC FOODS ' l-OL WT. CANS 33‘ C--i THK PONTIAC PUKSS. WKI)NKHI)AY, MAY H, lllflfl Jsf Phase of Children's Village Is Finished Relaxing In The Spe Services Building Lounge Earth Moving In Progress On The Wooded Site Behind Cottages 'IV spocuil snvirrs huiUlinR nl Iho Oakland County ('liil-(Ircn's Viliano is i('ailv lor occiipanry. 'I'his huildiMK and Iwo Collados, which h;lvp hern occupied ■Since Ihe lost ol the vear, n nslilule Ihe first phar;e of the vilioRe located w(‘sl of Ihe Couhty Service (Jenler on a 50-acre site ad-joiimii^; Ihe Stale Police posi on Norih Telegraph. Approximately fill children can be housed in Ihe three buildings which were dediculed at 2 p.in. tiMlay. Oakland Coiinly I’robale Judges Donald K. Adams and Norman II Marnard presided at Ihe dedication of Ihe $775,000 facil- (iroimd was broken for Ihe project March 25, 1904, with completion staled for last Jan. 9. FKDKKAL GRANT A federal grant of $:t23,000 was applied toward Ihe cost of the new units. Conslruclioh was slowed somewhat last summer by strikes which resulted in a delay in completion of Ihe mam building. I'.ach of the collages has a capacity for .some 25 youngsters. Rear View Of One Of The Village's Two Cottages The main hiiilding with a capacils for about 41) chiUlrcn is dc.scf'ibed as a .semidelenlion center for juvenile delin(|iients. The entire village complex, expected to lake several years to complete, originally called for a total of 15 buildings. VILLAGF, COMPl.KX A recent trend in juvenile offenses has been lower than anticipated and may result in a downward revision of the original village requirements, according to Juvenile Ciiurt officials. 4 i.. Si** Dormitory Facilities In Main Building Are Ready For Occupancy County Assignments Make City Unhappy Political friction may be developing between city and coun ty officials, according to comments last night by Pontiac Mayor WMliatn H. Taylor Jr. Pontiac wants a representative on the county’s powerful ways and means committee, said Taylor. Eye New Setup on Water Bills Official collection agencies — probably neighbwhood drugstores -- are slated to be set up to receive payment of city water bills. The City Commission last night directed the city manager to set up a .system whereby drugstores could collect water bill payments like they do other utility bills. The action came after a story appeared in The Press, last week in which Water Superintendent Herbert Parker said diiigstores were not authorized collection agencies for the city. V: Parker made the statement after a customer complained his water had been shut off, although he had paid his bill at a nearby drugstore. In a written report to tlje conunission last night, City Manager Joseph A. Warren said that rigdit now djAigstores were n(rt authority to receive water bills. FORMAL CONTRACT However, it has been the practice for several years for drug-, stores and some other merchants to accept watef bill payments, Warren noted. He said there ought to be a formal contract with particular merchants to receive payment of water bills in behalf of the city. The city lost its membership on the commitfee last year. Recent committee assignments by Delos Hamlin, chairman of the County Board of Supervisors, did not restore the city's representation on the important committee. “And we’re n o t too happy about it," commented Taylor. The mayor said he had expressed the city’s feeling in a conversation with Hamlin. IMPORTANT COMMITTEi:S According to Taylor, the chairman had indicated last year that Pontiac’s representation would probably be restored this year. At last night’s City (Commission meeting, the mayor read a letter from 'Hamlin that stated that the city’s seven supervisors are all on impor-. tant committees. JUMPED TRACKS - This Grand Trunk Hallway freight tram was derailed last night and blocked traffic on Oakland. All details about the derailment, including the cause, are still under investigation, according to Grand Trunk officials in Pontiac. The mishap occurred at the cro.ssing south of Sanderson. Harhlin said he had felt he would like to have a P b n t i a c representative on the ways and mean§ commitfee as soon as possible^' Sale of Land to Developer Stalled by Money Woes “We had a v a c a n c y this year," wrote Hamlin.’^ but, after due consideration, in the interests of the county and the workings of the board, it was not possible to make such an appointment at this time.” Taylor said Hamlin’s letter was appreciated, but that the city would continue to push for a man on the ways and means conimittee. Assignments for Pontiac su-pervisops are: Marvin M. Al-ward, salaries; Ejiward C. Bloe, equalization; William A. Ewart, by-laws and legislative; Edward A. Maier, aviation, building and grounds, and intercounty committees and planning commission. Iso, Howar,d 0. Powers, wcl-fare^onimittee and board Of public works; Marguerite Sim-' son, human relations and flower, and Victor Woods, chairman of the civil defense committee. I Development of a pair of multiple housing projccl.s on R20 j urban renewal land along F.asI ' Wide Track ha.s encountered financing difficulties, according to city officiels. i The city -may sever its commitment lo developer Sheldon Goldman of Royal Oak to .sell; him two^arcels of land for his proposed 50-unit a P a r t nti e h t complex. Estimated cost of the two developments is soipe $375,: 000. The land was priced at about $31,800^ Planning and\ Urban Renewal j Director James\ L. Bates re-I ported to the City Commission ! last night at its informal ftieet-i ipg that the developer was having difficulty in obtaining private financing for the, complex. M f:-; The commission had approved the sale of land south of Cottage and east of Wide Track for $13,-.500 for a 22-unit,apartment project. .. ALSO, the commission has received a proposal from Gold- man for a sipiilar apartment complex of 28 units for land valued at $18,300 on the west side of East Wide Track, south of Whittemore. Bates reported that Goldman has been actively attempting to arrange private financing for both developments. The urban redewal director told thg'commission that Goldman had ben informed April 8 that he (Goldman) would have to complete his purchase or forfeit, all rights to pufch^se the property. Bates recommended thiit the city .sever its commitment to the developer and begin negotiations with other developers. NEED EVIDENCE In order to do this, according to Bates, the commission must receive evidence from Goldman that be cannot secure the nece.s-s^bry financing. Then the commission would be free to pass a resolution terminating the agreement with the developer. Poverty Post Applications Being Taken Applications arc being accepted now for area directors in the county’s war on poverty, according to James McNeely, executive director of (he Oakland County h^conomic Opportunity Commission. Pontiac City Affairs Proposal lo Buy Renewal Land OK'd Area directors, he said, will be in charge of the neighborhood centers provided, for in a $77,000 planning grant recently received from the federal government. ‘ Neighborhood centers are to be located in Pontiac and Royal Oak Township. • McNeely said that the commission is looking for applicants with, experience in community service work arid practical background in supervision and administration. Salarjes will range between. $8,000 and $10,000 annually. Applications and resumes may be sent to McNeely, Economic Opportunity Commission, 1 Lafayette, Pontiac. The (;ily Cojnmission 1 a s 11 night accepted a proposal from the Union Building Corp. lo purchase H20 urban renewal land I for construction of. an office, building. the two-story building is to be a regional office for the United Autmobile Works (UAW) union. Rslimated cost is $75,000. The land, located to the west and south of the corner of Auburn and Center, is pn two sides of a house nOw on the eorner. The union offered $4,531 for the two lots. Urban Renewal Director James L. Bates reported that the city was slated to acquire the house for redevelopment purposes. However, the union will now purchase the building and tear it down, erecting the new office building on that corner. ACTION RESCINDED Before accepting the latest UAW proposal, the commission recinded its previous action accepting an offer for property further cast on Auburn. The sewer project is slated, for an area bounded by Wrenn, Fildew, Motor and Arthur. Ordinances covering city water bonds provide that the city can place delinquent water and sewer charges as a lien on the respective properties. The special assessment rolls for water and sewage totaled $4,310. A public hearing on both rolls — the sewer project and the delinquent bills — was set for May 18 The union had wanted a eorner location and the previous property was not on h corner.. In other action last night, the commission denied a request to vacate Hollywood, north of Sheffield. The commission followed a recommendation of the city engineer, , City Engineer Joseph E. Nei-" pling reported that the city should consider in the future whether a proposed pedestrian over puss oyer the railroad tracks at Carlisle is desirable. Also, Neipling said the future proposed extension of Hollywood must be evaluated. Commissioners last night voted lo cooperate with a six-county transportation planning study by the Detroit Area Regional Planning Commission and t h c Michigan State Highway Department. FEDERAL AID The long-range study is necessary'under the Federal Aid to Highways Act of 1962, which requires comprehensive planning to receive federal highway aid. Supervisors, .siibmiUcd his resignation Iasi, night from the County Commission of hlronomie Op|K)rtnnity. Powers said his commiflee assignments this yc.ar would b* too time consuming. Wide Track 'Heat' Put on State Again Participation in the study will not cost Pontiac any money. but city officials will furnish transportation data. Plans and cost estimates were ordered last night for the asphalt paving for Jour streets: Fuller from Madison to Mansfield, Tallahassee from Sarasota to Inglewood, Sarasota from Balboa from East Boulevard to DeSota. S l a t e ' highway department officials are to receive m o r o “heat” on Wide 'lY,ack Drive problems. This time it is the pedestrian problem. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said last night that state officials have had since March 2(» to consider what to do to enable pedestrian.s to cross the loop road. .Several Wide Track intersections — East Pike, Perry and West Huron--are dangerous for foot traffie. The intersections'arc considered dangerous for pedestrians bccau.se of insufficient traffic controls, and b e c a u sJ? not enough time is allowed to cross the wider roadvyaj', city officials said. / N e i p i i n g recommended against the vacating request until future occurrences in the area^ indicated* the city’s' best interbt. Special asselsment rolls were presented the City Gommission last night for a proposed sewer project and for delinquent and unpaid water and sewer-bills. Also last night, the commission gave its initial approval to a request by the Pontiac School Board to place an automatic spirinkier system on the 1 k w n around Its new administration building. SPRINKLER AREA Commission a pprn v a 1 was needed because the sprinkler system will go in the right-of-way for East Wide Track between the curb and sidewalk. Howard 0. Powers, one of Pontiac’s seven representative to the Oakland County Board of Eanier this-year city officials, downtown merchants and civic leaders went to Howard E. Hill, actingMjrector of the Michigari State Highway Department with problems on traffic flow on Wide Track. time WE ASKED “I think it’s time we ask^d the state about the pedestrian problem,” said Taylor.....“We asked them "March 20th and have had no report.” Tayior.asked the city manag; er to contact Hill and Max N; Clyde, engineer of traffic opera* 4i^. Clyde was dispatched by ' Hill "to meet with city official* lt.st time on Wide Track prob-I lems. • r I niK VON’n'AC WK;|)NK.8I)AV. ^IAY ft. l‘.Mift Budget Talk Setfor May 13 FARMINGTON - The City Council has scheduled for May 13 a puhli«; licaring on a proposed |S34,203 «)|)erating i>udget for 166SM. \ officials anticipate spending during the current fisr^al year. (ktuncUmen are (H>ntinuing tiielr review of the expenditures recommended by City Manage John Dtnan and will hold at Included In the pro|N*sed' budget Is more than $70,(MO for enpUnI Improvements in various depurtnients. VALUATION JUMP Dlnan said the suggested program can be financed on the current tux rate because Farmington’s assessed vahiatlon has Jumped some Il F million this year. In if! least two more study sessions on the budget before next week’s hearing. The meeting will be held at 3 p. m. in the council chamber of the Municipal Building. The figure being considered is somer |29,000 alaive the amount Variety Show Funds to Aid Scholarships UTICA — Employes of Utica (’ommunity Schools will present a variety show, "The World of Entertainment,” May 1,1 and 14 in raise money for the Rose I’roperty owners have been paying a ll.H-mlll (ax (o the city fur (he past four fiscal years. Breakdown of pru|M)S(xl ex-IMUiditurcs Includes: g c rre r a I government, $56,495; staff agencies, $30,170; public safety, $171,073; and public works, $100,005. Other Herns are public health and welfare, $400; library, $14,-7(M; and miscellaneous, $05,700. IIKiil PIlIOlUTY In his recommendations, Dinan gave high priority to recreation and park improvements and urged that a part-time recreation director be hired. The council took one action to further this program Monday night, authorizing (he improvement of the rest rooms at the city park. Dinon estimated the project would cost alxmt $1,000. It i.s aimed basically at making the facilities more secure from vandalism. Township to Vote on New Hall SHELBY TOWNSHIP - The first step toward construction of a new township hall was taken hy the townshl|i iMtard last idghl In Its rifgidar meeting. The bolird approved a mol Ion to put on the August special election ballot a proposal to levy one half mill for five years to fi nance const ruction of the new hall C 1150.661 Waiy Lake Budget Will Be Considered at Hearing WALLED LAKE A proposed to study the city's newls and to $150,661 operating budget for plan ways of meeting them. ltMi566 will be considered by Walled Lake residents at a public hearing May 13, The council last night s(‘he In otIuM' action, the hoard pot > its final stamp of approvid on Brooksidc Manor,, a new suhdl | vision near 24 Mile and Mound roads Proposr'd expenditures includrr funds to pay for a n<‘w fire hall. Esiimided cost of llu> crmstruc-oil Is $1),(M)0 STUDY TOWNSHIP TAXES - Youngsters from Dublin School and Cedar Crest Lutheran Scliool, who yesterday "took over” White Lake Township government, compare a tax statement to the assessment roll with the help of Treasurer.Ronald Voorhels. Among the student officers were Supervisor Debbie h’ockler. Clerk Raymond Schultz (second from left) and Trea.surer Bob Hubacker (right). (;jdrco Homes of Utica Is al ready building housi's In the new subdivision, which contains 30 lots. Run White Lake Government liberal' Students Take Over for Day WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP , backer, treasurer; Patty Smith, The budget suffered a bit, but' fire chief; Tom Johmson, police the youngsters "in charge" of White Lake Township government yesterday gave almost everyone a rai.se. The students from Dublin ■hief; .Sandra Johason, building inspector; Darlene Schons, as-ses.sor; and Dennis Galbraith and Ciirol Williams, trustees. Dublin .students on the plari- Kidd scholarship fund. The .show, which will feature musical numbers from around the world, was written by high !(chool teacher Joan Saunders and a former teacher, Mrs. Barbara Thompson. Teachers and Other employes will participate. Each year for the past six years, a project has been held to raise money for a scholarship enabling a student to study education for four years. The scholarship provides $100 per semester. The fund was named for a teacher who retired from the system several years ago. The show will be presented at 8 p.m. at the Utica High School auditorium. Junior High Fair Slated Tomorrow WALLED LAKE — Projects from every department wilkbe displayed at the Walled Lake Junior High School fair tomorrow night. School and (Yxlar Cre.st Luther-! ning commission an School deckled that the rnin- Another improvement al the park is the donation of three bleacher sections from the Farmington Jaycecs. The bleachers, to provide seating for 200 per.sons, are to be installed at the ball diamond within the next couple of Weeks. PAIIKING LOTS In other action, the council declared the necessity of constructing two parking lots near the Grand River and Farming-ton Road intersection. The lots, to provide a total of 145 parking spaces, will be located on the north t)ide of Grand River east of Fat-ming-ton Road and on the south side of Grand River west of Farmington Road. Following the hearing on necessity, 'the council authorized administrators to determine the necessary assessment district in preparation for sMater hearing on the assessment rolls. imum .salary for full-time township employes should 1m^ $6.(KH) During their Di-hour mo<‘k Township Board meeting; they also voted to hire a new fireman and three or four new |H)licemen. The meeting climaxed a daylong session at the Township Hall In which the students gained an insight into government and proceeded to put thoir knowledge (o work. The eighth grade*-i had qualified for their Youth in Government Day positions by writing themes about “How Town.ship Government Affects Me." IN MAJORITY Representatives of Dublin School, larger of the two, were in the majority. Their officers included Debbie F'ockler, supervisor; Bob Hu- The PTA event will begin at 7:30 p.m. The evening’s prograin will include installation of PTA officers for 1965-66 and the presentation of awards to selected seventh graders. Dinan and Public Safety Director Maurice Foltz al.so are to undertake a study of the possibility of providing off- street parking for the Grand River area from Warner to the eastern city limit. They arc to concentrate on the critical areas that presently have no parking facilities with the idea of providing spaces between the curb and sidewalk. Now participating in the "Books for Appalachia” project, the PTA is seeking children’s books in good condition to send to the schools and libraries pf |Appalachia. The study wa$ sparked by a letter from the State Highway Department requesting '.hat (he council adopt an ordinance prohibiting parking on the stretch. Concert Scheduled by lake Orion Band Lori Bruns, Penny Laws:;n, Brenda (Jampbcll, Richie Richmond, Gail Campbell, Betty 'I'odd and Shutta (Yum. The (Yular Cr(>st officers were Raymond .Schultz, clerk; and planning Vicki linker lind Bob Klomp. The board instructed a special commilt(Hi to investigate finan cial arrangemetils for a 12 inch connection to the Delrolt Water .Supply main at West Hlicn and Auburn. The coniieelion will serve a proposed subdivision in section 33 on .Shelby south of 21 Mile. The board al.so inslnjcled the town.ship attortu>y to start legal proceedings to close Sandy Ridge Rifle Range, Rt^sidents of the area liave reported numerous incidents of stray bullets damaging their property, A bid of $2,993 plus trade-ins, for two i«)lice cars, submitted by .Terome Dimcrtn Ford of Utica, was accepted by the board 'I’he council al.so platrs to spend some $5,000 lo start build-ing sidewalks in Hie city. 'i'lie biKlgel would allot $45,050 for general operaliot\, $5,930 for Hie municipal offici', $565 for eleclions, $9,300 for the police department and $8,186 for the fire department. SOME SALARIES A $4(l,0'20 allocation would be Used for malntiMiance of the public safely building and equip-enl and Includes .some salaries. A( (he meeting last night, a representative of a group of eillzens urged the eoiiiiell to liiisten (he reereuBon pro- gniiii. It Is estimated there are I.2W children in the city nnd Bur-rounding area who could l)eneflt from a rei'reatlon program. In other action, the council aiiproved n*zonlng for a coin car wash on the southwest corner of Wrdlsboro and Pontiac Trail, 'i'lie change from residential to commercial was requested by R W Galvert. Tli(> le/.oning was recommended hy lire planning commission and approviul by (he counrdt ovi'r Ihe prolesls of several Wellsboi'o residents. The iiuinicipal court portion of (he budget would be $5,100, ami the amount reserved for merit raises, $2,000. Fowler Family Sets Services .Suhsidics tit other funds. Including thrzse for library, ceme-li'ry and roads, would total $15,770 A new figure Is $1,8.50 allotted for parks and recreation, STUDY UNIT Tire council lliis year adopteil an nrdtnance establishing -a parks and recreation comhilttee RoniE.STER The Fowler Fanrily Evangelistic Party will present special services at Ihe Auburn Road Ghurch of the Nazarene May 6 throtigh 16. The services will begin at 7:30 pm The group consists of Rev. and Mrs. Thomas S. Fowler; their three children, Paul, Sally, and Carol Ann; nnd Miss Mary Ruth Upton, who assists with the music. They sing .solos, duct.s, trios, and together ns a group. Miss Upton presents Tcadingr for the young |)cople’s services. automatic TRAHSMISSION FlUID Typ« A. __________________ Suffix A. ^I^OAL Meats or axcaadt original aquipmant ipacificalioni. Limit 2 gofloni sumst/msiie! aso.fMO.JvM eaimes iAMQUS LAKE OiUON - rt\c Lake | Orion Symphonic Bdnd, under the direction of Roger Faulman, will p r e s e at its 25th annual spring conedrt at 8 p.m. Friday at the high school, Parents who wish to contribute books to the drive are asked to take them to the program tomorrow. -X The department also asked that Grand River be re-marked for five rather than four lanes. The h Lg h w a y department made the requests in answer to one from the city that a traffic signal be installed at Grand River and Powers to slow the speed of (Irand River traffic. /Hand selections will include ‘Procession of Nobles” by Rimsky - Korsakov; “Fantasy on American Sailing Songs” by Grundman; ’’The Vanished Army” by Alford, and several pieces from the movie "Mary Poppins.” - The concert will be recorded and made available to the public. Order bjanks will be available at the door or from band booster members. W. Bloomfield, Brandon Twps. 2 Area Libraries Will Get Aid I Two township libraries in Oakland County are included among 18 in Michigan to receive a to-’ tal of $1,087,926 in federal aid for construction and expansion. The West Bloomfield T^ship Library Board will revive $8,-183 for remodeling of d building tQ use as a branch Imrary, and Brandon Township will recieive $7,209 for construcl^n of a new librai7 building in Grtonville. Hie grants wwe made available under ihe $30-millioB^Lfe brary ScrvjcM and Construction Act pas^ in 1964. Under twms of the act the money is provided on a matching funds basis, with onedhird of the construction costs paid by the federal government and' two-. thirds to be paid by the municipality r^uesting the grant in areas with a population density of 35 or more per square mile. ... 4. West Bloomfield Township is presently using the second floor of the Westacres clubhouse in Westacres Subdivision as a branch library. TO REMODEL BUILDING Plans are to remodel a former store building at 7321 Commerce to serve as a branch. The. $25,00(1 project is to be started in about two weeks with com^, pletion scheduled for mid - Au-I gust." I The 4,200 volumes in (h e present branch will be moved I into the building as soon as the work is completed. I The two-third$, share of construction costs has been made available to the board through township appropriations." old library, which was torn down last summer. TO B^GIN JUNE I ..Construction of the concrete bloqk building is scheduled to begin June!. The township’s share of construction costs, nearly $15,000, was raised in three weeks through a public subscription! drive, according to Supervisor: Richard Wilcox. i White Lake Twp. Teen Will Present Recital The new $22,000 B r a n d o n Township library will be built in Ortonville on. the site of the WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Thirteen-year-old Guy McLean will play his accordion in-a recital presented by Mrs/ Jack Robb at Dublin School Tuesday night. Son-of, Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Blais, 880 Fairnsworth, Guy will perform at 7:30 p.m. 'U- C—10 I " i ^ . I TIIK PONTIAC l*HlrtS.S. WKnNksDAV, MAY », lUOfi MARKETS Irregular Rise '111*? lollowliiii BIP lo|) pliers eovrrlng snlrs of l(*eBlly jjrowii jiriMluco liy growers iiiul sold li.v Hipm III wholi'Niilc piicluii^i^ lolN QuolatimiH mo fiiriiislicd by llu-Ib'trolt Miiromi of Mmkcls as of Fridiiy. Mart Averages Record Highs ^ NKW V(>ltK I AIM j lci'(‘(l Hlreiinlb miioni^ liliie Produce loree eoiilriliulors li 1 ndvnnee, Sli'cls, motors, J limldmi^ mnlerials, eli'el ' ei|oipmeiil,s, robliers mill spnee is.soes presented n,'*i i! |)ietore. I A rise in insltdlmeut erei KAILS lIKdlLK ' Itatls were a Illlle hiKlier balance, airlines iiioslly nil ebanj^ed. The Associated Press averaf^e of (it) stocks at noon was np I I at :i4;i 9 with industrials np 2.2, rtiils np 2 and nlililies u|> 3. 'Hie averagea were bolatoriHl by a ;t iMiliit Jump of IhlPonl and I-point K«ins by Union Carbide. United Aircraft and Haltimore & Oliio, toKetber with a rise ex-eeedinf{ 2 liy Kenneeott ami ad l-vanee of more tlian a point by i Anaconda. j Prices were Kmerally lil^be The Dow Jones indnstrial av crane at noon was (ip 2.BO at in active trading on tlie American Slock Kxebange. New Mexico A Arizona Land rose aiiout 2. Corporate bonds were mixed in liglit trading. U. S. Covern-ment bonds continued to show strength. The New York Stock Exchange Poultry and Egg: Steel Findings Factual-Abel Won't Commit Uniort to LBJ Scald on Raisa WASIIINCTON (AP) President elect I W. Abel ol the United Steelworkers Union said tiKlay, ‘‘We accept thi^ fads" in a Wliite House report tliat tlie steel industry can afford a 3 per cent pay raise without Increasing iirices, Hut Alkd (leclIiKsI to say wlietlier tlie union will restrict its demands to the 3 per cent figure recommended liy the President’s Council of Kconomic Advisers........ ■ A "■ *- ‘‘That’s a question we are go Ing to be talking about after we resume negotiations,’ ’Abel said In an Interview on NHC’s "To day” sliow. Hi'fore negotiating a four-month postponement of last Saturday’s strike deadline, the on ion liad Insisted on a pay raise of 3.2 per cent which the council previously liad recommei'ided as the guideline for noninflation ary |)ny raises in tJ S. industry ns a whole STICKING TO DKMANI) AImiI said the union is also still sticking with its demand for a cost of living adjustment in TWirtition~“t(T an over ' aft pay raise. “We’re inti'rested in botli," said Aliel, wlio is scheduled to succeed David J. McDonald on June 1. McDonald is contesting the union election result. Bucking Trend Hotelman a Succesk lly DORIS KLiSIN BEVERLY hills' Calif. (API ~ Hernando William De Vos (!ourtrlglit, tills town's luxu ry innkeeper, is laicklng a Ireml In U.H. hotel operations and making a success of it Willie many famous old hotels are lieiiig alisorbed liy large clialn operations, Coiirtrlglit lias twice demonstrated l|ow lo remain Independent. In the priH'ess, he’s made two liotcl,s first Uie Ueverly I nils and now the Beverly WHshlre havens for such varl«*d guosis ns Elizabetli Taylor and corporation presidijBts. He’s made tlie hotels a .soidal hull of Beverly Hills aial siir rounding Los Angeles tlirougli a hard driving skill befitting a former Bank of America vice president and a descendant of Mexico's Spanish conqueror Hernaiuio Cortez. Beverly Hills In 1934. He’s brought much of it buck since he look oyer the Beverly Wil- \ CAIUtlAGE TRADE "We sacrifice ('onventions for the carriage trade,” is how (.’ourtright put.s it. “Personalize service our guests have Hie money lo pay for it and to expi-cl it.” ’I'he Beverly Wllslilre was Iralllng the average 1-Os An geles liolel occupancy rate liy f» piu' ceni when lie todk over; now It’s 10 |wr cent aliead. 'I’he lian<|uet and bar and restaurant business liave dmibled. A $0 inillion, 250 room expan-.sloii is |)lmined for Hie fall at Ihe Beverly WHshlre He pul througli a similar expansion at Ihe Beverly Hills during his regime. WHITE ELEPHANT "The Beverly Hills was a bankrupt wbile elepbaiit for old ladles wben be took it over,” recalls Courtrlght. "We made it into a successful resort hotel. "Times have'changed -- and so has I,os Angeles - and the Beverly Wilshire lias become more a sanctuary for liusy people. A world traveler and n* nowned gourmet. Court right’s "Los Angeles is no longer a resort. Today it’s a cultural liuli with the new music center and art museum— and a business center. "Yet the people who come lierc like to get away from thA hrashness of commercialismV hrashnuss of commercialism^, they see around them. \ SPEAK LANCiIJAGE "We run the liotel European style. The employes know the new guests’ names, can sjaiak Hiidr languages. "The lobby is kept small, lo keep out gawkers. We have plume extensions in the batli-riKims and we polish our guests’ sho(>s when Ihey leave tliem outside Ihe door. ‘ We select rooms lo fit the guests A lot of Americans like our Mexican style suites — but we never |iut a Latin American in Hiem, They’re away from liome and like to get away from Built by bolelman Arnold Kirkeby In 1928, the Beverly Wilshire will be undergoing its first major expansion next fall including a riMxfjop swimming ^ piMil, penthouse suites and a I,-(MK) capacity ballroom. (^Ourtright and his partners, among them Jimmy Stewart and Irene Dunn, bought the hotel In Oct. 11, 19(il from real e.s-tale operator William Zecken-dorf. The union’s original demand for a pay hike of 3.2 per cent would amount to about 14 cents p<‘r hour on top of present wages and fringe benefits totalling an estimated $4.40 per hour. A 3 per cent hike, as suggested by the ('ouncil of Economic Advisers, would be slightly more than 13 cents. The union’s cost of living demf^nds would bring the total to 17 or 18 cents per hour. and photograph appear oftim in the society columns as do those of his noted guests. The Chevaliers du Tastevip, one of the numerous gourmet societies to wliicli he belongs, meet.s regularly at Hie Beverly Wilshire. Among Hie members; ArrTInlBeroT“Mff’Wnn T7TSW NOTED PEOPLE "When people read about oHi er notiHl people having their " f'dministrallon has ■social events at Hie hotel, they ‘'"VP wont to come there, too,” says ^ l<»"Pl«'lP Us drive an aide. j b> reduce the nation’s balance Courtright drew Ihe carriage "f Payments deficit, it was dis-trade away from the Beverly W***'^'^* today. Wilsliire wlien lie took over the' Assistant Commerce Secre- Move lo Plug Loophole in U.i Payments Deficit WASillNCTON (UPl) - The 'J $ * » ( t Sutxesstul % ' Investing * NOT PATTERN The steel industry granted an 11.5-cent hike to apply durin,g the four-month strike postponement, but said this did not necessarily set the pattern for the eventual final settlement. The iponey is to be set aside and the men do not actually get it until after the final settlement. The 11.5-cent figure amounts to about a 2.7 per cent increase. The industry contends that productivity per man hour in the steel mills has averaged only About 2 per cent in recent years, compared with the council’s estimate of 3.2 per cent for industry generally. By ROGER E. SPEAR Qj “I have a fairly good, steady job and $4,000 to invest, My wife is a sick woman who needs medical attention and 1 can take care of this now. I would like to Invest for the future, when my earning power will be less.” D.D. Andrew E. Brimmer vcalcd that his department had asked 100 American-based affli-ates of foreign companies not to borrow money in the United Stales in order to relend the cash lo their parent companies overseas. Commerce Secretary John T. Connor wrote the 100 firms Monday, Brimmer said in a speech prepared for delivery today to the Foreign Policy Association in New York City. But Brimmer tpok pains to emphasize that the government does not intend to suggest — even informally — that foreigrl-owned firms keep their earnings or capital in the United States Early Grain Prices Narrowly Mixed A) If 1 were in your position of sending them home, and had an emergency cash * * * ' I reserve in addition to the $4,000 He al.so reported that 344 U.S. you mention — I would buy two firms doing a substantial busi-good stocks with established I ness ovcr.scas expect to improve growth records and very mod-j their payments ledgers by $1.2 crate dividends. ' In this category, I like General Telephone & Electronics. This is the largest of the independent telephone systems and controls a major manufacturing the President’s request for "voluntary cooperation" in reducing the dollar outflow. RESTRAIN LOANS John.son also asked banks to restrain their loans to foreign borrowers. Behind Connor’s letter was the growing fear that foreign parent companies deprived of funds directly, might use their American-based affiliates as a means of borrowing from U.S. banks. U.S. banks already have been asked to watch out for attempts to substitute domestic for foreign financing. A commerce source said there was no estimate how large this loophole might have proved in , the absence of any appeal from Connor to the companies. Connor had hesitated to make the appeal for fear that it might be “misinterpreted” as an attempt to crack down on the withdrawal of earnings or capital by foreign companies with affiliates in the United States, Brimmer .said. WELCOME INVESTORS “We welcome foreign inve.s-, tors in the United States, and CHICAGO (AP) - Grain futures prices were mostly nar- ,59 H!’'* ?!., tions todav althonah Knvhpnnc complex as well. Sears, Roebuck has been establishing a fine earnings pattern, is active in insurance and may soon be in mutual fund sales. I strongly | I recommend its purchase as your second selection. billion this year in response to we have a firm policy of encouraging new enterprises to be .set up here and existing enterprises to expand,” he said. “We do not intend to make even informal suggestions to Sfiastri Tells of Cease-Fire tions today although soybeans showed a continued firmer trend. Trade had become slow near the end of the first hour with soybeans % to 1% cents a bushel higher. May $2.89; wheat % lower to Vr higher, May $1.43'/h; corn unchanged to Vs higher, May $1.33%; oats unchanged to Vr lower, May 71‘/s cents; rye unchanged to % lower, May $U7V4 bid. 1 Ql "1 owr bdir serles^^ E and H bonds. I also receive Social Security each month. In view of so much govern-I ment deficit spending and the possible removal of the gold base, I would like to know if Treasury Position 37,265.0: April 2*, W64 t 5,5«5,»35,635.n luly 1-24,806,002,696.30 Deposit* Fiscal . __ 95,9)7,753,813. Withdrawals Fiscal ) ^ ^ 102,889,259,322.99 103,861,993,789.27 X-Total Debt- 318,586,979,345.15 309,492,761,929.44 Gold Assets— ' 14,411,687,349;16 15,463,011,903.57 (X) - inctudes *284,1)4,967.26 debt not subject to statutory limit. . __________________________________________________ during 1964, estimated cash , 19*4 Low ex-dlvl-^--‘ — . BOND AVERAGES Compiled by -Tha Associated Pres* 20 10 18 18 18 Rails Ind. Util. Fgn. L. Net change Noon Wed. 83.3 102.1 88,7 94.5 9 Prev. Day 83.3 102.1 88.7 94.5 9 Week Ago 83.4 102.7 ««* s « Month Ago 83.5 101.1 Year Ago ............. 1965 High 1965 Low 1964 High 11.2 1C1.0 STOCKS wd^”when'dls -' nd—Next day 65 Stocks ...... BONDS 40 Bonds :: 10 Higher grede r, to Second o—*- ■ . 90.24-0.01 . 84.90L-0.03 . 92.97 ,^EW DELHI (UPI) - Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri to-Ajy pnounced a provisional cease-fire for Indian troops facing Pakistani forces in the disputed Rann of Kutch. Shastri told a House debate that Indian armed forces had been ordered not to shoot in the disputed area as long as diplo-it would be advisable for me ‘ triaLic efforts are under way Tbr to cash my bonds, while the ^ peaceful settlement, government is still in a posi- But in answer to angry tion to pay off, and buy land.” questions from members T H. I wanting to drive out the “in- A) If the time ever comes waders” he said no formal when the government defaults cease-fireJiad been ordered. on lb, obligalions, Pm afraid: "Wha, has been agreed to la an'llio'^'fr"™ his car any land yoU bought would have that nothing would be done to. ^hile it was narked in the citv little value. I know that there aggravate the situation from our ^ are many conservative people! side so long as efforts for reach-! Rummage sale C.A.I. building like yourself who are concerned ing a peaceful solution to the 9-1 Fri., JJay 7. —adv. about our federal deficits. There Kutch fighting has ended as a these enterprises to restrain remittances of foreign earnings or repatriations of foreign capital,” Brimmer added. He said that while foreign firms in the United States “should be friee” to obtain as much money as they need for their U.S. operations, “they should refrain from borrowing here ih order to relend the funds to foreign residents, including their own parent companies.” News in Brief Clifford Hebestriet, 19; 8618 Buffalo, Union Lake, reported To Pontiac police yesterday that thieves stole personal items. top government officials. PlteaSe remember that the Federal taxing power is so great that any default on the debt is inconceivable. Please don’t unload your strong Governments on a misconception. Sell only if you know land, want land, and th r moderate inflation hedge which it provides. *To order yoitr copy ^ Roger Spear’s new 48-page Guide to jweek Ago Successful Investing, clip this kga° notice and . send $1.00 \with your ne (•ltd iiwfirdH, preHeiiled by Hefi-Mon Ford, vice preHidcinl, itl llie • Centnd Offlct^ Hulldlng In I>e«r born The three who received ‘‘Ford t’ltl/en (d Uie Yeiir" nwnrdii were Uiivid W. I.ce, 1160 Pembroke, Itlooinfleld IIIIJh; Mrtt. Ann Sheldon, 3560 . W(MHlule, Itlrmlnghum; and Mrs. .lonnne E. SmIUi, 31858 .Stamiin (,1rele, Farmliigtoii. 'Hie I6 otlier area winners in the area were Jack S. Hlckharl and Arthur W, Salt/.man of Franklin; Jane H. Cameron and Ruth B, McNamee of Birmingham; Richard T. Schllskey, Walled Cake; Thomatt Stockton, South l.yon; Cjarn M. Miller, Wolverine I,t»ke; Thomas P, (Jzubiak, Farmington; Robert A. Kortlias, Wixom; and Harold J. Chapman, West BltMtmfield Township. Others were Fdward F. Dolan, Beverly Hills; and Frank H. Cibbs, (Jordon C. Hendt^rson, (fTii.-itav J. Siegmnnd and lloy E. Wainio, all of Southfield. Tlielr awards were mounted silver scrolls bearing the engraved commendation of Henry Eord H, chairman of the board. Armed Robber g Takes $167 at Service Station An armed robber t()ok $107 from a Farmington Township service station attendant this morning and then left the victim standing in the garage while he made a successful getaway. 'Hie attendant, James Mathis, summoned police who set up roadblocks in the area around e.riffith’s Standard Service at 10 Mile and Middle Helt. The robber eluded police. He was last seen by Mathis traveling vilest on 10 Mile in a white Dodge sedan five to eight years old. The holdup man was described as white, about 5-feet-7, weighing 170 pounds and 40 to 50 years of age. Mathis said the man was armed with a small-caliber pistol or revolver. Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas /I inC I ojs 1 lAC I'iiishS, V, MAY /J, IlltW Police Officials C^ll MHH. I.EOCOl.E Mrs. 1.00 ((ioldle) Cole, 56, of 458 Midway dl(rd y(!Hlerday after a long ilIncHH. Arrangements are pending at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Pontiac Titwnship Hurvivlng In addllloii to her husband, are one son, AlfreWAIID I.SI.ES Service for Mrs. Howard R, Isles, 511, of 37,55 PIrrin. Water ford Township, will be at 1 .10 p.m. Friday at the Donelson Johns Funeral Horne with burlrd In White Ciiapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, Mrs, Isles, a member of First Baptist Church, died this rnortr Ing after an Illness of sevend years. .Surviving are Iut husband; a daughter, Mr.s, Jacqueline A. C(M)k of Waterford Township; two sons, Richard 1,. and Donald C., both of Waterford Township; and It grandchildren. Also surviving arc two brothers, Frank Tebenu of Aulrurn Heights and Ixniis of Pontiac. WILLIAM H. KLATT Service for William 11, Klatt. 88, of .382 East Blvd. South will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Price Funeral Hdme, Troy. Burial will be in Union Corners Cemetery, •Troy— Mr. Klalf died Monday after a long illne.ss. He was a retired sexton of Evergreen Cemetery, Detroit. S u r V i v i n are his wife, Mamie; four daughters, Mrs. William Smith of Avon Township, Mr.s. William l.intz of Union l.ake, Mrs. John Hankins of IVoy and Mrs. Bert Braxton of Sterling Township; one son, Frederick of Madison Heights; If) grandchildren; three greatgrandchildren; and one sister. of Ortonville; 21 grnndchlldiei and 0111^ brolber MRS. JOHN IIOKNF ROMEO — Service for Mrs. John (Ali(?e) Horne, {HI, of 154 S, Rawles will be I pm, Friday at It 0 I It' N Home for )‘‘u tierala Biiiial will t>e in Utica Cemetery. Mrs, jlortie died yeslerday af ter a short llhufss, Slie as a' past matron and lib; nuunlKu- of Romeo chapter No. Hi, OES; charier and life member of tla^ Order of Amaranlb of Mount ('h‘mens, nuunher of the Order of Wlilte .Shrine of Jerusalem, the Mtainl Clemens (^)url; nieniber of the First MettuMli.sl Church W.SCS; and the ,S“nioi Citizens Club Surviving are one son II. Owen Hlough of liciroil; one sister, Mrs I'lanc Wagner ( Utica; and,tbn;e grandchildren [ MARCEL .1. LECLIIYSE ! ROMEO .Service for Marcel' ! .1 Lecluyse, .56, of 67425 Sisson will be 1 pm. Saturday at Roth's Home for Funerals. Burial will be in Romeo ("emetery I Mr Lecluyse died yesterday after a long Illness. Me had l>een etnp|oy(Ml as a latli(re.ssion of appreciation for the cooperation that the foundation has received since it entered into an agrei'meiif in June I860, to op erate a rehalillitatlon center within tiu' hospital. Harold Euli'r, lios|iltal adndn l.strnlor, accepted llie a w a r d f r 0 m l''oundallon Treasurer .lolin R. Wilt at the annual din ner nu'cting of the organization in the Veterans Memorial Build ing, Detroit ,1 P .Schau|)ncr, Detroit zone miumger for the (.ladillac Motor Cur (’(i , vtiuM named preNident of the foundation, riucceeding Ricliard .S Daley, who was elevated to chairman of the board. Didey replaces Dr. Jijih C. Montgomery of Royal Oak. Nixon's Unci® Di®s .SAN'TA ANA, Calif. (AP) -Hugh M Nixon, 73, an uncle of former Vice f^resldent Richard M Nixon, died Monday of a coronary occlusion He was an insurance and rerti estate salesman In Fullerton and Lakewood, Calif, from 1820 until he retired in 1851) MADE POSITION CLEAR .Surviving ;ue his wife. Hazel; two sons, Elroy of Oxford arut Dale of Jonesboro, (ia.; three daughiers, Mrs. Lois Beardsley and Mrs. Leola IVarson of Oxford and Eh'anor Scott of Cin-I cinnati, Ohio; and 12 gramtchll I (Iren. WYOMING (Al> I Waller Inloniiants i said Situ Itnig, (ii'U^'shy. ’.to, ot ilollaml, a I'aki.slan's lUTinaociit ri'pi't'si'n swilchiniii II with tho (•|('sai)t'akc lativo in till' .^KA'I'O council, JL ('hhi Railway, was killi'd m.idc his col iinlrv's |)osillon ciirlv tod; [iy in n w ork ;i(T,(tont clear. ;il the'lil jl y;irds ii 1 this Giaial I’akislan will only sign a coiii- Iliipids suhurh. l’olic<> sairi lu‘ muiii(|iic which (aki's accoiinl in wa.s kiioc k('(l Undi'i • till' wlu'i'Is sonic form of I’akislan's own scrap steel dangling other train. • of reservations aliout the policies an Ix'ing lollow(>d in .Southeast Asia FREE prospectus-booklets lefiirn the fucts nhout the CHANNING MUTUAL FUNDS U OS.nn.eu Com......... I I I I Ch.n-,,,.!; Waluua ot'liuaOon, noil indiciilo your ctiolco ot llto fine fund ptonpoctuH booklntn nt)ov« (ind mail Ihis ndvottiHomnnl todny CHANNING COMI'ANV, IS MIS.S MYRTLE MATHEWS Service for former Pontiac resident Myrtle Mathews, 64, of Hillman \yill be 1:.30 p.m. tomorrow at the Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Oak View Cemetery, Royal Oak. Miss Mathews died yesterday alter a long illness. Surviving are three sisters. Police Probe Bar Robbery MAE MILLER Word has been received of the death of former Pontiac resident Miss Mae Miller, 86, of Cham-bersburg. Pa. Service was to have been there this afternoon in the Lutheran Church Miss Miller, a retired schoolteacher, died Sunday after a long illness. Surviving are a brother and a sister. Pontiac police are investigating the armed robbery early this morning of the Chief Pontiac Bar, 78 Baldwin. Manager Pauline Walton, 30, of 161 Summit said a man carrying a “shortened” 22-caliber rifle came into fhe bar about 1:40 a.m. The stocking-masked bandit ^ took $133 from the cash register i and fled out the rear door. Miss Walton said. , ! GOP AieJe Is NameiJ to Board of Housing C. March Miller II, executive director of field operations for the Oakland County Republican Party, has been elected to the board of directors of the Na^ ti-mal Association of Housing Cooneratives. j i Miller, who is president of the Michigan Association of Housing Cooperatives and Woodward Heights Cooperatives, Royal Oak, is the first Michigan man, and the first Republican, ever elected to the national association board. WH.LIAM A. GESSAS i KEEGO HARBOR - Service for William A. Gessas, 74, of 2121 Maddy Lane will be 2 p.m. Friday at All Saints Episcopal ^ Church of Pontiac. Burial will j be at Pine Lake Cemetery, West Bloomfield Township. ; The Pontiac Lodge of Sorrow No. 810 BPOE service will be 8 p.m. tomorrow at the C. J. 1 Godhardt Funeral Home). Mr. Gessas died yesterday af-; ter a long illness. Re , was re-i tired from GMC Truck & Coach | Division. He was a life member j of the Oakland County Sports- j m^ns Club: Pontiac Lodge No.! 810. BPOE; and a past commander of fhe Heart of the Lakes Post No. 2706. | Surviving are his wife. Louisa; two daughters, Mrs. Ixtuise Mary Adams of Waterford | Township and Mrs. Morley N.! R"rn.s of Dearborn; one son, William H. of Keeyo Harbor; and eight grandchildren, CLARENCE GILBERT ORTONVILLE -Service for Clarence Gilbert. 67. of 105 M15 will be 11 a m. Fridav at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home. Graveside service will be 3 p.m. at Beaverton Cemetery, Beaver- Jet Crashes at Base; No Fatalities Reported TOKYO (JV-A U.S. F105F jet fighter plane crashed into an American depend'^nt housing area about 20 miles southwest ^ of Tokyo tonight, a U.S. military spokesman said. He ^aid, however, “full extent of injuries have riot been determine and no fatalities were reported at this time.” The spokesman said the disabled Americari aircraft “crashed ipto a street ip Sagamihara housing area of fte U.S, Army, Japan base, damaging four^ to six dwellings.” ton. Mr. Gilbert died yesterday after a short illness. He was a retired farmer. Surviving are four sons, Lloyd of Pontiac, Jerry of Ortonville, Charles of Colman, Wis., and Raymond of Gladwin; four daughters, Mrs. Ruth Cowell, Mrs. Leola Greech and Mrs. Geraldine Bourdori, all of Pontiac, and Mrs. Dorothy Hubble AF Contract for State GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - A $2,785,828 Air Force contract for aircraft navigation and b(robing I computer systems from 'Lear Siegler, Inc., Instrument Division here was announced Tuesday by Sens. Patrick V. McNamara and Philip Hart. iUM OnM SAU STURDY OAK BUNK CANOPY BED L Rugged Sturdy Oak Bunk . . . handiomo wood with a mellow glow . . . Guard rail spring mattretset, and bot9 included at... \ For the Young .J Lady, Beautiful White Canopy Bed, Twin or Full Size. TRIPLE BED SLEEPS THREE Sensational Triple bed, complete with 3 mattresses and bases, guard rail and ladder. Only Choice of Matching Bachelor Chest, Bookcase Hutch or Utility Cabinet !' - . tesjoir With ploftlc fop. guide. Choiice of Whito Door Chotf, beautiful matching Hutch. A bargain Solid Maple TRUNDLE BED 69““ Maple Trundle Bed, ^ , complete 'with nome ^ brand innertpring mattreis and bate. Includes Mattresses DOUBLE SIZE BUNK BED Solid maple, huge DOUBLE SIZE BUNK . . . will sleep four, complete with mattresses, base, guard rails and ladder. . THAYER CRIBS $9088 ckc THAYER CRIBS in white or maple, teething rails on four sides. Complete with innertpring mattress. . Includes Mattress MAPLE BUNK BEDS $69i Rugged, hondsdme MAPLE BUNK BEDS con^ete with mattresses and ba^, guard roil and ladder. \ Complete Includes Mattresses SIMMONS ENSEM^f^ Simmons Hollywood entem-ble, includes durable wash- ^ O O able plastic headboard. ■■ Quality Simmons mattress "" “ and box spring ... complete. 58< 3 DRAWER MAPLE OR OAK CHEST $1088 |||c&c Large 3 Drqwer;.Matching Maple or oak chest. MORE THAN 100 BUNKS, TRUNDLES and CANOPY BEDS FULL LINE FOR TOTS and TEENS Available at BUNKLAND Full Size Foam ee-t BED PILLOWS 97 Aluminum folding Cots.....:*9“^ Foam Mattress C & C NO MONEY DOWN 30 MONTHS TO PAY BUNKLAND Free Delivery 0|ien 9’til 5:30 Mon-r Thurs., Fri. lil 9 P.M. 1672 S. Telegraph, Pontiac Between Square Lake and Orchard Lake Rds. 338-6666 NO MONEY DOWN 36 Months to Pay! Free Gifts Free Refreshments --ij, ■^1' 1.;. R^ardldss of Classroom $12:0 Tin<; I’oN'iiAt: I'KK.SS. \VF-I)\K,Si)A V, ni:N ( AHioY MAY A. 10(W Students Require Personal Attention By LESLIE J. NASON, Fkl. I>. Larger sdiools and c1assc!i may be comparatively cheaper to operate but they have brought prolileme. In the little red schoolliouse, progresH of each pu|>II waa a day-to-day c o n c e r n of the teacher. Although there wer*-eight grades in one room, lliere usuidly were not more than sev eral .students in a single grade ready. 'Iliis is Jacoby on Bridge When time came for a cla.ss to i Educators are inclined to i Small, ungraded classes lend recite, every pupil had to he .school failures on par j themselves to individualized ed ents, pointing out that children j ucalion and, so, bring gratifying who have trouble in school fre j results (picnlly have poor home situ ^ - * a * alions I Tlie cost of^ediioptlnn for all * * * on a .smalhclass, lndlvil lem of giving each child more personal alicntion, even fhough classes remain large. The very fact tlwd the teacher ,shows inlcicst, not only in his snt'ccss, lad In ladping him lo ineve greater success in the far cry from the r a t sltuatloii. T become skilled' In avoiding being called upon. Conseqiienlly, a pupil's slow progress in reading or writing may go unnoticed for two or three years. .SKniltE AT HOME Tin- chdd who comes lo s(;lmol fi'om a honi(‘ in wliii'h he is .secure in his posdion as an In dividual member of the lamily #.is able to cope for a few Imurs iuiurc,'has'a profound effect on i'ach day with the less personal ,h,. ,>f the pupil. school sllualloii A NORTH 8 «QJ ¥K84 ♦ J»3 4k J 1008 « WKST gAST 47.54 4 A 10 8 ¥AI«S ¥gj»fl2 ♦ AO.'i't?. ogioii 4QS 44 2 soimi (I)) 4 K 9 8 3 2 V 7 S ♦ K 7 4 A K 7 .3 B^.st and West volncnihle Houth West North lOost 1 4 r*BW I N T I'ush 2 4 Pass 3 4 Tuss Pass Pas* Opening lead—¥ A. I retaining the six spot in dummy ' Then he goes afler spades. East wins the first S|)iide and huids another heart, Declarer ruffs, leads a sfiade lo dummy, gets back lo his hand witli the s(‘ven of lrunip.s and discards all dum my’s diamonds on Ids spades " .llm: “IlighI! Here’s a qiies lion about Ihe bidding. North might go from two clubs lo two spades to try for a spade partial. That would land them in spades. How would someone gel to four spades?" Oswald: ' After N o r I li ' s three-club bid as shown in the box South might bid an un.sound three spades. North would ex-j pect South to have a better hand j and rai.se him to four.” I am not siiggesling that schools attempt lo replace the home as a haven of security for the individual child. I AM H II g g e » t I n g that the schools organize their tench-lug so that each child’s leurii-ing problems are given personal attention. By JACOBY & SON . Here Is a father-son discussion on luck in duplicate. The hand is taken from | North the Spring Na- * J tional charity ,, jJ game and nor- ^ ^ I bidding u I d find South playing a I three-club con-P tract reached S 4 Puss 7 You, South, hold:' 4K J 8 7 6 ¥QJ3 4A.%4 4A 2 What do you do A—Bid six hrurts. Therr Is no reason to try for a grand ■lam because your partner lim-lAfttoxi shown in the , ntA hand when he bid four JALOBY box. hearU earlier In the auction. Oswald: “South can make todays QPK.stion four spades becau.se trumps | hicane five and clubs break perfectly. How shades over your live dia-WOuld you feel if you sat East- rnonds, your partner bids five West and watched South romp/what do you do away with thqt contract?’’ ' Jim: “Just about the same way you would feel. Like a man who had just run he^d-on into a brick wali. I woi^ feei just as badiy ai^t thi; whole thing if my opponent played any spade contract at all. Even If declarer made three odd for a score 0/140 I would know that I had a bad result a sepsll tract would ^nly be 110 130.” Oswald: ^Somebody might play thre^clubt,qnd make five. Assume mat West opens the ace of hearts and continues the suit. South wins, in dummy takes his ace and king of clubs, carefully jtrologicaL ' - ‘^4 t/ ^ s| Ity . . . also chlldrety, Ihe fine arts. TAURUS (Apr. 20.W\sy 20): Good to eat around. See people. Write, phoftd . . COMMUNICATE. Ideas are ....... - -» dlsclmlnat- nuestlon w TAURUS message, n be settled. "Voice ________ I your side. So m< ahead with enerey and confidence. CANCER (June 21-July 22); Time finish projects. Extend sphere of Ini anca. You can show real progress It ) try. Shove aside self-doubt. Be awa perceptive. Sapk out people of Influence. LEO (July 23rAug. 22); Look beyond ..nmedlate Indications. Study of motives' ■ndlcated. Be a "chess player." Analyze ■•■lltles. Y( various moves, possibllltl VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Good aspect highlights friendships, success on all fronts. Share problems, knowledge. Indirect approach pays dividends. THINK, LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Good to seek alternative methods. HUMOR and spirit of cooperation serve you well In face of aufhorltafive opposition. Compromise If necessary. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. - ___ now of minor points, details. Keep municatibn lines open. Listen to suggestions. oat hint from today's LIBRA mes-•age. Can't act on ilmpulM-SAOOITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Dec. Change* Indicated where policies CAPRICORN (Dm;. 22-Jan. If): Bold — ’ tw r*qulrad In personal mat-cooparatlon of family mfinbers. . lar?. 0 Prank •Incara .and REIOURCePUL. AQUARIUS (Jan. SS-Pilb. Ml: Work In -------------“‘i group* htdi' ' ‘ “ ________ *ml**», future „ ad. Opportunities arise. _____' .dfpiBMi ^KN&fiClES: Day ‘ •miMmeamanft nnatisnshlp of soma notsi. , II Ml. Pm. Carp.) Sandwiches Forbidden in Space J (DPI) ..down ll)« Ihw agalnal aaiHlwId.- lnr!(M« aim) lar to Iho ont! Dial oonii ml dm I Domini fllKlii of lion of a llouao ap 8 u 1) 0 0 m m 11 ,1 waa done by the i Kidnap Victim of 30| Di«» of Meort Attack KORT I.ADDKRDALK. F 1 a TFrF/l»ONTfA(’ ntKSS; WK.DNKSDAV. MAV it, 1»J Htip W.nt.d M«U t Ifilp Wunfad M.b -a ADJUSTtR TRAINEX iM'fi I a I o r found , but I b f! r e wan no ii b r 0 a d wan HOine $4 I ... Death Notices wrrr rrpllON a( The 2, 5. 9, IH. 47, SB. #8, 77. 79. 108. 112 ; AR WAfiMBR PUMf OAS, SAI. :i'r.rrr;" .y .n .. uNDKii sTiiAiiN zt:. men. and they are under a |,a,.n i .Mom., k.««. h«, ■> I.....iJ ll.iu Ib Ix” runaial »*rvlt« will Iw held rl lltey are under a le said. ‘1)111 this Is the ' he said, “but this is the rvn 17;;;. ..'»« Stales of America's ai. j )»- space proKran.. and aj. mat- rrT.'lXT.het i:;2::';Li:;i:h::'C sri,'5;,'IS":.:rw.'-T''-'"- ......... 1?.*".' (Swell,' M" l*SSr« Ore'^.'ll Me.^D„,o.hV H«ab.e, M,,. G.,- r ''li tr 3 Ared Palrol Boys AAA National Safely Patrol ral-D C.. May r. !t. They are Samuel Corey, 13, of 1047 Stanley; Ronnie Splude, D()bner, 11, of 725 Gesrtrude, Wa- s at Al- Lineman Electrocuted Wa.I Mlirm; tf .1/HI Appliance TV Salesmen EXPERIENCED EEDERAl DEPARTMENT t»^ F|)R^t lAi i» S ^ ) MANPOWER Wonts lisps ATTENTION MEN! inrr,e!ri:i:ir::y:;ii!is'; EARN AS YOU EEARN Cwk.' .nd’% IrLTd ‘l ^ "ind'o'i,o.ld :'.i,*\':;’‘'h:id'rile ' ‘ tOATS“ nRAvm^^‘;v^ArN^' D. E. Pursley DONELSON JOHNS •merited ”h.l Tre'raic. HUNTOON M'--AUTO SERVICE ■ experience, for foil time MECHANICS TIRE MOUNTERS SEAT COVER INSTALLERS GENERAL SERVICE ment doily between 9:30 a.m. ond9:00 p.m. Monlgdjmery Warci ...™?ontiac mall .. liilH " N, .. M, SWIK.HMIN GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD TEACHERS irrha": S’-: MiOni I A(,IM) MAN I OR 1 IM 1 OR L()ST mm .-JT'it Irsi call Em" 7332. ^ "■ I broach FLAT OR TOOTH I Help Wanted Male 6 neip nanTeo mme ^ ^ ^ ''^ii7va:"2?Vo:i«r.nVsr3'3(’.?4E ^ rr;: EXCHANGE MAN WORLDS LARGEST Water Condition Co. FOR MEN OVER 25 fe'Kr J2EH:?r-' "-■rHsira yss . NEED'$$$ o, \\r WELDERS (ARC) REMKE, INC. "liSS WANTED ?§3:r2PU"'S "r€’S"ia;..™"" r.;-.' T..r""" ''"?7iyg".''"cm7*h,^Sdidh'llHd'’m^^^^ i:*'- "?=::»sr5Ss DinirKj Rooiri WailresseB S;-SS«;S'S •fSKi-s "E'TS'iu'irs'*’™ FxeewieN( i!n girl for rni r 'Izrsnsr.",'.","*- exPERlFNCHO SILK FINISngR Marcury Uaana,., IW Rocha.t.r FXCFRIENrFO WAITRESS, FIM I .r'SrCS'ATi:’ "=.*HE.= ;:,x-T.,,“xr! S.-K 'Hrs^ssF’”-- IRMAIE CAB DRIVERS. STEADY Tf:V:=«.="f- [HHf_ i’zn. Morgan Drive-Awoy Inc. n,sr«'iJS' "HES—- Real Estate Salesmen RADIAL DRILL turreElathe OPERATORS ■#S£Hfs5: •wmmmE SALESPEOPLE FOR ' NEW HOMES MODELS TO SELL FROMI FULL FLOOR TIME-TRADE-IN PROGRAM! PART-TIME as.,svi.Er.'o?,.,r s:«L‘’s.!Es , £r;.;s^ Salesmen c«TirT5iita-----1 a'iSris slS." I EVm’” SALESMAN mMi TMenNefeded ■ tATH^E-oaT'S"' TOOL MAKERS Appliances BS U'OR rJ:................ MANPOWER Tamporary lo^d OPTOrturltt'.t Tor typists Ap^i7«.^i:i:t;cx Earnings to $8,000 per “ ; eSf DO WHAT YOU WANT, WHEN YOU WANT TO, WITH PRESS . WANT ADSI o.m. and 9 p.m. Mqntgomery ■ Ward COOK : AAMSOS Counter Girl liKK t’-U WODEIS TO StU FROM I EUll FtOOR TIMf TRADE IN PROGRAM I >a'; , ......................... Toylor Agency OR 4 03O6 n’:';,, SALESLADIES WAIt«SSl< OVg« 31, NO liXPBRi WAITRESSES : ' , 1; , iN riiV/I’oN i hVL rui'ijss wki)XKsi)A\'. m^w /s. umi.i mmm O.M.AM.^^;- li33P^ HUDSOlvI'S *tHl!HIMANf) WAIIht« f-Oft NK.HT SHIM tk | ^^luM ^ l-'iH lii"« ••..HlUin, •u.ll«M. In |HHS~....... -K»,r 1 A LAWN service JviZir.irrs.vr.::':''/,, isin is-HKr"“ Si'S? MNn.lMirnn"* "" 'HsH SOMETHING SPECIAL 'S-S3 I Acne WARREN STOUT, K orTJgW ' r«n,.v;;, iparlment., FurnUh.d 37 , » KOOMV K.HM,NM,H, Mil, f, OR TO TO BUY OR TO SLU CUSTOM BUILT MODEL 5i"E! r"vi,':X 1 ilt wJi^, n!2< ...» W..»K .(..• I ' »7.H,^.^•..'■'I'rs'.U/''• ' H. C. NEWINGHAM ■r,rr33H;«=i’rcAl™;:-™-’“ GIROUX ■s,rfK. r“ Sislock 8, Kent, Im;, .11 I lo 10 miY OH Id SRI 1, .'rvVJ'K .:L.r....> (..ll Pmil j..n«5 Realty '7}~[... ■" ;EOr?;a"“"“ *7,..... lARGB lOVPlY A ANO hAni, riU“:'i£F“ = rBEDROOMI s3;f.HvE!iTl".3rs ESiH*rGsri ’ eamily home FLATTLEY REALTY mis' in II I- I "w>5av"er’ HAROLD R, FRANKS, Realty oakL,! El.nl''5'££F’ '2^: ,7 271 S. MARSHALL WILLIS M. BREWER "nSmSvoRUTw, DRAYTON FENCE CO. Aluminam »ldg. lUim | |.ontiaC HNt! CO*' .................... A,MO, JOHN TAYLOR, FIOOR 1AYING, »l.ionllnl or .oml, kVn, SHERRIFF-G03LIN ' p- „ t • ™0 SIDING -; - -o.. ,J.«. j T™,., r Sth»,.dl n^inAi^z bob-s van service . _ ==yrGG::;:‘v=~:3 ..... .................. ' ' 150 ORCHARD LAKE D„.,..i», 23: iS:?;,"";;" ...--T~— SAMSHO?.. BEL VISTA APTS. . ts*« HAMMOND LAKE AREA .... ^""$27:v^r RENTING $59 Mo. i,r" $3,000 CASH “”™«£rr HAYDEN TRI I .EVELS $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION :k; ’'"tv,sirir'insr' rj,S!'??;’!' $175 DOWN MOVES YOU IN For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 '"rNrp'v^AJo'cr 3,t^iVaI , »r'G££"=.r'K' 1^:“: “Slio I.r»^ 0., .»D o« s..v,c. 2,::—”"—i?;:. „«™. , 624-42.00 ‘ ;;r Dp2o°ri,5'''.r lifson'o? ^ ' "r.vm po«. Wanted Children to Board 28 1'T.I.nm, im'Uj ' 30 \n Rent Houses C tarnished 40 $13,500 HIITER EVELYN EDWARDS Want,*d Household Goods 29i inn'.,RP «... dd/ ./iv temh|&4 INTERNATIONAL STOP DREAMINt Let Us Help You S BOATS-MOTORS-TRi i CY?E'diii;E‘” : P,oo.3,„<,.p..po.m.np„I.N„d .N1CK.A1,U.«L .»..............................."TO:sr- CLARKSTON AREA AL MARTIN, Rea 50d S. BroAdw.y, Orion A LITTLE CASH LAKE LIVING hrnl, Nlomlnom storm,. 3-c.r B- S-slf . SMALL .home WITH RANGE, shingles ANO ksjLs'”" “■ --gl^ Sand, Grade! and pirl «..fc7■ '£“f"?;£rE a,' T„",f,urs"a,5'?S: GILES REALTY CO. ru^MiYViViEiisTMt^cr iiy SNYDER & RANKE S"S'S»= JAMES A. KEANE V."h."bass MI^D^A TUCKER REALTY 334 0701 Mixeci LAZENBY Elizabeth Lake Area rs 4-ilEDROOM TRI-LEVEL ON 1 ACRE lop ,011, ' PA.,: truck ,,HAUUNa ^ ..AWN, ^ ^ MOTEL-HOTEL "??“-fj’S —» I .™i“^:Z;ir;.::“"': Neighborhood TO: 50 LODEL OPEN AJM^E^R^NOONS 1-5 WESTOWN REALTY Wm: ‘^OR'^ioUTYTN^TRADl.'y®'^' OY LAZENBY, REALTOR "”Mgl’‘ltpt:rLlSTINGSER°v",cr’ ARRO Taylor Realty OR dS'^"’^"'’^ ^,njl’3.73d» Trucks to Rent A-l Spring Clean-Up SMITH MOVmOC ^ra^n^2d°5r3lr,?,'." Carpenler Gontroc.or IH. „„d G, EOUITY SlorejirL, ............ A. JOHNSON & SON HAVE BOYERS F 12 ifas,,' WANT ads: A-l BUYS' - U5K SI&-- ' Phone 332-8181 PONTIAC PRESS 'D-9 .I'Y T UE w3 li£#« RHODES . albe^Tj F'ruahour Struble OAKWOOD MANOR mmm sr.rs-«‘... SPACIOUS RANCH KW""";:™.;"::'..";;.,, tiin.b.ih ink« tiiot.! »:..........j mmm\ . JFE 8-0466 '■ 'BUD" IT'S,, , ... GAYLORD wMm-i "BUD" Nicholie, R«nl "KlSr’' lDQRRIS ,m.u. ...d oven 1 ’ ' 1A NO CONTRACTS "^1“ 1| NKBf) lANt) (ONtHAfIfl, HfrA ”A,..nrr Rugs $3.89 : ^ ' OA .VOU 1 new >e, lion no«, open,, ........ALvo two bedfoomii, loll bath end ^ [L, WMIK lAKP ON fORTKR RO. Oi "irtCl''«rvl( eLrairoVbiVlna’ln'vmiV «rsMaJ0~- - SJmt -l ssS-Eii !!0'£''cs.....,;,'s.i;i *“'C2ais„a£- I” SIlVERIONf TV, TLOOR MO *>uttin. 1150 alter A p. m., .I.ia osi^ .s, “ss. sk a’i3'K- izn z:r±Tv:i rzT riUK^tS”' CARS FOR PARTS, 195S PI.Y-..... " ■ ' 1964 VW Turner' Ford Jsed Trucks 103 OLIVER BUICK FE 2 9165 '“rs“:S .nsCHER BUICK “*iisr deVverv* -&r:usic THOMAS THOMAS , ...c,OPY.~Apn,v.r6i SAVE $190.10 Thomas‘a.R.L. Spinet-Organ ^Stringbass -And mW Others THIS MONTH ONLY! Jack Hagan ' Music Center OLIVER 1963 Chevy '/i-Ton ! Over 75 .-us^°d‘^1:Vrs^'i;^LTo”ck 1960-1964 Renaults $298 to $1098 '’s.n,"£s:.,'fs°o'c i-is si 1S;=B 1964 FORD S.vlesld.vtrhFbW.^^^lU .11.,, ‘'■‘van AUTO TRAILER SALES OPEN SUNDAYS AT 1 P.M. _ _ .. 1.2.*® 5 Rent Troiler Space _ 90 ms 8. '. 'i , ■ Tires^uto-fruck 92 BEAT THE HEAT •£g.rgS“’ ■¥«■ - Used Truck Tires All Sizes FIRESTONE STORE ■333-W17 Auto Service 9J 63 E. Walton FE 8 4402 OAKLAND CENTURY ,Tt;^;,;?;5eiVu‘]er?n;rne, V,i-"or.r;r: : ^ .Cliff DreyerT V Gun and Sjlprts Center GMC . '^SFasw 391 S. leepland Over 100 factory official new and used cars and trucks in inventory. ^^N^liLVT.^NG"^)FUlE^^'vl """doc's Jeepland BUICK ”-\rx SPORTS CARS Grimaldi's •’”?i:fcLrA“iI’” '’IS,s'K'lS"'-'-'"" 1963 nuiCK "I E SAORE” 7 seden e<)ul|,ped will. »ul UL^iv'6^4.r5iir=- Repossession WILSON'S WEEKLY SPECIAL WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC Fo^^^VeyDVa, lkri79UiS3^£te '”Lo"682 M64.°°°° ’”ni£s^6V Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 8-4071 ~=S?S='“‘3 SZ,‘SSL«-^ ”' ESTATE STORAGE Capitol Auto, 312,W. MONTCALM FE 8-4071 3 Tine PONTIAC P|iieSH, WKl)N|ieSI)AV. MAYfA. lOOfl ^AHMAPIIKK itv A|id«rMoii iihii T««mli JCKY AUTO ;v »»!ja CHEVRpLETS - I i:: ^ o~ir AddiSrSalioti 055 Oakland Ave. ..•rMroiziiAv.,, Spartan Dodge Hr '7 . S“=r-'5S^ s;s,£r7rs..r£,js ■r^rS,rS“S ;Si'„ “.‘trlf ;=r", W— ROSE RAMBLER Doc's AO r-ORD CmiNtRV OCHIIMf; m=^s ^ OAIFORD Turner Ford I CATAUNA^ PONTIaC, li.nSO HAUPT PONTIAC 7,;"si::-"-.... '’;;«;.A:.Vi.rm';s .. 1«~-H I'JO;) Ru; itcjiigs CONVERTIBl^ES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2'S FULL E ivAi^' c n F ?nNvfc«T,.„ ,- AS LOW AS $79 DOWN Li£"S“- ... Tumor I-'ord Spartan Dodge ¥iii:£H::r ...W'ATO ISS.".............•;;: r<^WMprMar'A;lM'c)l"r;'Mwy “=5t" - *-!.:;rr:vs.ccn„srAr.oMWAol tllHyj ............... 0.I .. and UMd Can 1M 1964 TEMPEST L«MANS Ee£'SH£12; Turner' 1'ord US 3 CAT, .... ,.)lh htAck I "tL Voii ‘ ORlVtEN I9A5 HAMftl EH flmiV «;irt.rArr:r RUSS JOHNSON Usod Car Strip (l/< OHW Rc^pofdsosRion ‘S .S^Oparlan Dodge I ESTATE STORAGE lPfi4 TEMPEST IlsET- 1963 PLYMOUTH s;r*.=:t£' '“'-ifs;- r;ir- ........... ”;i,:r'.‘s,‘''»"'’ 1962 ^Poi^tiac Com $2295 May Showers "oiriZ' vJ'' I!’»« SrN'ina U«r-nNI(A. B.. F' 1 o w ers I ''"'''7 !1T,! IVJI ^Fnlcon^ 2door i«dan, radio HILLTOP RUSS JOHNSON $1697 Pontiac Retail Store ''’"'R'DVr'’“ Homer High! AIR CONDITIONED '•IfSl—vi EE 3 7954 'li:; iTiiy- I9A< nONNRVIUE rONVFRTIBLE, jr: t:;n^;‘vyrm’.T;A" LLOYD'S 1963 BONNEVILLE mmfm $1547 $2,195 1960 OLDSMOBILE $995 1962 CHEVROLET Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 8-4071 855 Oakland Ave. Spartan Dodge $1,295 1962 FORD $1,295 250 OAKLAND 333-7863 MAY SPECIALS mmmmi mws VAL-U-RATED USED CARS 100% Writieni -rr/rrirri. Guarantee | "■' “ 1963 OLDS F-85 Heater, Wh 1963 OLDS “88" Brakes, All 1960 OLDS “88" Steeri 1961 OLDS , V-8, Au _0nly 1963 POllTIAcTportfcTpe, power 1963 PONTIAC Cotalina 6-Passenger Wagon, OA. Jfnc °"'y * 964 OLDS “88" Hardtop, Power Steering, ’ Luxury Sedan, with full power, ir Conditioning ................$: $1695 $2195 $1195 $1295 $1995 $2195 CHEVY Impalq Convertible, V-8, Stick Shift, Fire Engine Red, _White_ Top $2295 $2995 $1995 1964 OLDS Slarfire 30-Doy Uncon 1964 OLDS F-85 Coupe, 6-cyl. "TYEAft-WAftfeANTr 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 BEATTIES pS?SI Banker's Outlet ,.. IlYEriuun Turner Ford ^WINoflAM LOOK ifr 1 "'frolf' Volkswagen Center. 1962 Rambler Classic Custom $995 1963 Ford )0( assStiStr '•s,-'.!;.”.. 'is an Dodge »»5J5 '’£«»i?Sn,ta •• w '’2»,’3s,:w-5rj5i '-a immm ---, ....- ___ ■«»»» 'EisT='-I' rucicV auto := =r± « = lH|Cfp $1495 ^ 1963 Falcon 2-Door Sedan $1195 . 1961 Falcon . Only $695 K O M P A C T K O R N E R 1962 Falcon' $1095 1963 Ford ne “500" $1495 1963 Ternpest ssr,4„mr'i:vr;'.;,rt $1395 1961 Falcon Future 2-Door $M5 ( "Your FORD : ■- .'On Dixi 0^ 3-1291 ^ DEALER SINCE 1930" OR'3-129i: I UK IaJN i l A( I uishS. W^KuNKSiUAV. MAV A. iU(i5 0or|nan’$ OLD MILL TAVERN iNiMNAmnu BUFFET ntiMt SItMIP.N. DOUMAN’S Old Mill Tnvc-rn Wiilerford. Michifj^an OR .'1-11)07 For Simply lloiivenly HOASr IIKKI (!arved to \'our Individiinl TuhIo, WKSTERNEH BEEIL mi FEET In iHir niAWCNl lornilon I IIUK-k WcNl of Tol<.grii|>h nt 4108 W. Muplo ltd. /•ofuriny manf ol/ior onlrooi In a Rest Till Almosphcro of ('olonial ('harm. your botlM or* Jack Cochran and Sijf Stcnsiand t»|Mm II:SO Dally 7 Day* a Woek Phone 626-4767 No Animals or Beatles? -It's Unfair I NEW YOHK (Al>) - Bar llie Roalles? Turn Herman’s Her mils Inlo real liermils ' Itesliirt Ihr A.n|inals’’ Slop llic Hollln^ SI ones ■' "Oil! ye M'kIs! Unfair!" Hcrenmeil MarKarel Knrnyla, 17, of Chl'cat^o, a Bealle fan. j a * ■ * I "ll's jiiNl like Ifiklnj.; .lames Horul away from llie urown | up.s," said Larry .loliiisoii, 111, of, I Indianapolis. ’ A Irairsallanlie dispute be-1 tween the Brlllsh Musicians Un-1 Ion and Ihe American Ecdera-lion of Musicians ()ver British ttroup,s lakiiiK extra eii(»nf!e-! menis while in Ihe United Slates' and thus piiHinp Ami-rlcai) per j lormers out of jobs has Ihrown j the beat music scene into dis cord, BAB (illOUI'S I The result may be to bar Ihe Bcalles, Herman’s llcrmil.s, the Animals and other British Ki-oups from Ihe Unded Slates American batiils would be barred from makint! British lours. The disclosure sli uck a sour , note with .some American leen- ‘Tiosh, t>ee whiz," wailed Kenny Lowell, 14, of Seattle, Wash . | who |)lays Kuitar iind trumpet and is Iryini; to form a combo of his own ‘‘We oufthta go over there and bump Ihe bum that did it, What a buncha finks" MOUSI'IKETEEK UEINI‘()K(’I‘,MENTS - Annette Euni-cello, the Disney Mousekele(>r wiio bcifame a leen age star in “beach" movies, is expecting a Mouseketeer of her own. Slie .said she is planning to raise live or .six children. Annette Expecting to Begin Her 'Brood' Toi Munzig, Hi, of Lps An^ '".7)tne“beai language of bis own. “1 think it’s the pits," be said nial means the lowest of the low. / MUST BE ILLECAL’ “They can’t do this,” protested Bonnie Lou Vorbeck, Ifi, of (Charleston, W Va ‘ II miisl be illegal or somelbing If Ihe Beatles can’t come here’and our singers can’t go there, then I don’t think aity diplomats or ambas.sadors ought to be visiting back and forth eilher." Isabella Piolluck, lit, president of Ihe Chicago Beatles U.S.A Ltd., said, “ail the kids will go out of their minds" when they hear of the ban, » wikR MIK K nnilIt» Mxx«««» » NOW! at 7:00 S 9:35 HURON J Bverybody who's ever been funny is in it! n SlNCEIITIUCY ^ iMBERll' 2 SID CAESAR ^ BUDDY HACKEn ii EIHEl MERMAN ^ MICKEY ROONEY DICK SHAWN , PHIL SHYERS TERRY THOMAS JONATHAN WINTERS STANLEY KRAMER ‘ERA MAD, MAD^, WORLD” mum JlMiiRAKTE EXACTLY AS SHC IN RESERVED SE SHOWINGS ADULTS ^1.25 CHILDREN (under 12) 50c FRNiSICOlD sitNuimMiR UURA PMUVisibN* TfCtIHICOLfli-UNIUD ARiih's “ONE OF THE YEAR’S 10 BEST FILMS!” ' -N. Y. TIMES Marriage Italian style \ ,^swiinUiren ulmed i\ color: Wirceiio Mastroianni tonight at 7:20.9130 / EXTRA: *‘A Tribute To Sir Winston” * CARTOON / _______icrrm------------------- HOLLYWOOD (AIM An netle Funieello, llie Mousekel-ei'r who became a (ei'ii iige star, is aboiil lo have a lillle Mou.se-keleer of her own. The baby may spell the beginning of the end of Ihe most suceessful career lo emerge from Wall Distu'v's famed Mickey Mou.se Club television show. “I’m not afraid of spoiling my . teen-age image by baying a baby,’’ says Annette. “But if I have one baby a year, like I plan — and five or six, like I plan — they may get tired of waiting for me, “I’ve always said I want to bring up my own children, not leave it to a nurse, and 1 really mean that, too.’’ TV SITTER Annette may have a built-in baby-sitter on her home lelevi-, sion set — mommy as a Mouseketeer. The old Disney shows are being rerun. ' Annette’s singing and dancing made her the 12-year-old darling of (he moppet set 10 years ago. So well did her childish angularity malurg inlo shapely curves that Annette stepped right out of kno(' socks info a two-piecc bathing suit - - and the starring role in Amoriean-International’s beach party movies. With Frankie Avalon as co-star, the four low-budget films, j “Beach Party," “Mu.scle Beach j Party,” “Bikini Beach” and i “Beach Blanket Bingo,” have j reaped a financial bonanza for the studio and the stars. Annette winds up the . fifth, “How to Stuff a Wild Bikini,” this week. ENJOY PREGNANCY “Then I’m just going to take the rest of the yiear off and enjoy being pregnant," said Annette in her beachside dressing room. She expects the baby in October. “I still have my contract with ' Disney, with yearly options, so have no idea of how many y(‘ars I’ll keep working." ^ * * A Annette says her husband, manager Jack Cilardi, .‘(4, told I her when they married last Jan-I uary that whether she would I work and how long was up to lu'f. He has lunch with li<‘r nearly every day on the set. “I’ve had a kind of :i i)rol)lem with this pictute," .said Anpu'tte. LUNCH NAB “I tire easily Ihe doctor didn’t even want me lo make this film so I have to nap after lunch every day. “And I couldn’t wear a bathing s(\it, so they jnit me in slacks and dresses. “I’m often too tired to cook when I get home. Jack is learning now. Neither of us is very good.” The baby will come home to their two-bedroom apartment in Beverly Hills. They bought a three-bedroom hillside house overlooking the San Fernando Valley, but it won’t be ready until December, says Annette. NURSERY READY “We’ve decorated the nursery yellow and white. If the baby is a boy we'll name him ;ifter Jack, If it is a girl, wo lijWcn’t decided. What we really want is twins.” Agrees to Truce in Shelter Rift VKTORIA, B,C. (AP) -- A dvtermltUHl Roman CalhoHc nun has agreed to a cooling-off pori-^ od in her battle against u elnirch order (o close her Iw-loved animal shelter while nego tiallons on the subject coiillnue. For six days, doughty 70 year-old Mother ('(«clllo Mary had defied an order to close flat Good Shepherd sliellcT she ami five other slslers etperate. As the (leadline for the church order pa.ssed Tuesday, Mother Cecilia’s turns and Ihe 120 ani mats were sllll at the slieller Mol her Cecilia wa,s with' church officials In a negolialing session When it was all over Tue.sday niglil, Ihe Most lltw. Remi De Boo, l)i,sho|) of llu' Victoria Dio ct‘se said everyone involved In I tlu> dlspule had agtassl lo a ' “cooling-off period" “The issues here have become completely dislorled,” .said Ihe bishop “Ohviou.sly no ralional .stilutlon can he readied s(j,,long as emotions are this higi/ ‘‘TIuTt'fore, everyone has agreed, inchiding Mollier Ce cilia, limt a cooling off peri(Kl, or a pniod of calm or a Iruce or whatever you want lo call it, is needl'd while Ihe negotiations conlitiue." Bishop De Boo said he was involviul in conferences on the .suhji'd of Mother Cecilia’s anl-tmd slieller “until well past what should have been lime for mv supper" Mother Cecilia is holding Ihe fori a( Ihe GoikI Shepherd sliel-let' she vowi'd slu; would never .ahaudon Outside, a luivalo deleclive ■ w.is on (Muird - hired hv Mother (’('Cilia after she lu'ard rumors .sonK'otu' might try lo .set fire to llie saneluarv she eslah-lislu'd with a $(;o,(MH) bcciue.sl left her by her father. j LAKE Theatre WALLED LAKE 624-3980 STARTS TOMORROW DRIVidN THiATRR ■tilPoVkS StO, AT WAtTON BLVp. — T* aTwaitom BtvD. Eitn t CHlfPRlN lINtllH 17 fHI, the screen -tofif , 6'na- uudsom "BiK -arid^ ytbfx*' ^ ri’io" DANCROFr-riNCH foier Mason I Waterford 614*1800 'FRMlAVALONANNniERINICEllO-DEeOltiytWAL^ DONNA LOREN- MARTA KRISTEN-UNDA EVANS BOBBI SHAW • DON RICKIiS-PAOl IVNOEI BUSTER KEATOnI ^ 4 JiRLWIlSONr fBANKOVAlflN MfUNICULO . SEE! HEARli“°^3,c HANK WILLIAMS MTracle MTleoiB Nixon Sees Next Trouble in Colombia 4louiARDjounfon':L in Drayton Plains HOME OF THE SPECIALS COMPLETE TURKEY DINNER Tempting Rpjast Young Tom Turkey Giblet Gravy Cranberry Sauce Old Fashioned Dressing Whipped Potato Carrots and Peas Oven-Fresh Roll and Butter Coffee, Tea or Milk Choice of 28 Famous Ice Creams or Sherbets SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY FROM 11:30 A.M. TO CL0SIN6 3650 DIXIE HWY. Drayton Plains (U. SSfHighway UlO) NEW YORK (AP) - Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro plans a Communist infiltration of Colombia in an effort to spark a revolution there, says former Vice President Richard M. Nixon' “According to reports I have, Colombia is the most vulnerable and is next on the list,” Nixon tol4 newsmen Tuesday night before boarding an airliner for Europe. ISJixon said ,Prc.sident Johnson shoiild a.sk the Organization of American .Stales to “adopt .sanctions, economic, and mili- *ar', if 11'..ssary.Ho stop the ’xpci'l rf revolj(.ic\ from .':uh>“ , The former vice president called Castro the “major culprit” in the current revolution in the Dominican Republic. •k -k k "It would be a great mistake I to wait until He strikes again iti I Colombia," said Nixon. Pontiac 293S OIXI* HieHWAV(,as.lO) I BIOCK N0»TEI-E6WAPH rp^ THE PMGE FOR IWCOVERMB THE SECRET OF THE SRDW BUe GOMES HIBH-TBBR UFEI \ ■' I ,r TaiM>()NTlA(^ J*HKH3, WKDNI^HtoAV, MAY fl/ UHtft —-Television Programs— Proorami fumlihad by ataHon* llat«il In thia column oro fiub|«ot to diango without noMco. Chnnwiii a-WJiK-tV, 5Q.^\VKiPv"iii'--WTVS' '' WEDNESDAY EVENING 1:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (i) Movie: “Hercules Against Home" (In Prog ress) (9) Yogi Bear (5(1) High Bch(H>l Bporls (M) Television Journal a;30 (7) (Color) Newa, S|)ort8 (0) Bat Masterson (56) Invitation to Art 7:00 (2) Doble Gilldt Dohle coimults an electronic machine to decide or> career (4) Juvenile Court (7) Have Gun. Will Travel (9) Movie: “Teen-Agers Krom Outer Space" (Eng lish, 1958) David l>ovc, Bryan Grant (56) (Special) At Issde 7:30 (2) Mister Ed Posts’ new neighbor looks like a horse-hater (4) (Color) Virginian Widow insists on carrying on husband’s work among liostile Indians (7) Oaie and llanict (50) Drag Uacing f 00 (2) My Living Doll R h 0 d a Is programmed with information on 250 girls (7) Patty Duke Whole family helps Ross on Little League team (56) Great Books 8:30(2) Beverly Hillbillies (See TV Features) (7) Shindig Guests include Ray Peter- (50) Auto Classics (56) Guest Artist Concert 9:00 (2) Dick Van Dyke Rob has sudden loss of memory (4) Movie: “Sad Sack” (1957) Jerry Lewis, Peter Lorre (9) Red River Jamboree 9:30‘(2) Our Private World (See TV Features) . (7) Burke’s Law (See TV Features) (9) Festival Law student lodging with eccentric family finds himself living in a nightmare (50) Tennis 10:00 (2) Danny Kaye 10:30 (7) Scope (See TV Features) (9) (Special) M ademoi-selle Barbara (See TV Features) 11:00 T5D (4). (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) HoiW^cing 11:15 (7) Nightlife\ 11:30 (2) Movie: “Risennd Fall of Legs Diamond’’ ^(1960) Ray Danton, Karen Steel^ (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (9) Movie: “Young Scar-face" (English, 1948) Richard Attenborough, Hermion^ Baddeley 1:00 (4) Lawman (7) After Hours THURSDAY MORr^ING 5:10 (2) On the Farm Front 8:15 (2) News 8:20 (2) Sunrise Semester 8:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:50 (2) News 7:00 (2) Happyland (4) Today . (7) Johnny Ginger 7:30 ( 58) Sets and Symbols 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:30 (7) Movie: “This Angry Age” (1958) Anthony Perkins, Jo Van Fleet ?:45 ( 56) English Vi 8:55 (9) Morgan’s M err y-Go-Round 9:00 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read 9:30 (56) American History 9:55 (4) News (56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (4) (Color) Truth or Con-sequen(;es (9) Movie: “Hamiet” (1948) LdUrence Olivier, Jean Simmons 10:10 (56) Our Scientific World TV Features Surrender of Germany By UnIM Press International BEVEIU.V IIIM-BILIJEH, 8 30 p. m (2) Jed offers services as handyman to nelghlM>rs. OUR PRIVATE WORLD, 9:30 p m, (2) New twice weekly prime-time soap o|M!ra, drawn from daytime w^rlnl "As the World 'Itirns,’’ «-oncerns youtig divorcee who leaves home town and takes a Job In Chicago hospital. BURKE’S lAW, 9:30 p. m. (7) Owner of greeting card company Is done it. Guests Include Eddie Bracken, Wally I Cox, Huzel Court, Jill Haworth, Les Crane - ABC SCOI'E, 10:30 p. m. (7) 'Hie 20th anniversary of i surrender of Germany to Allies is commemorated. MADEMOISELLE BARBARA, 10:30 p.m. (9) Toronto || University student Barbara Thompson travels to Montreal 11 to gain insight into Que)>ec’s Anglo-French cultural split. 11 10:30 (2) 1 Love Lucy i (4) (Color) What's This I Song? J0:35 (56) French Lesson 10:50 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 10:55 (4) News 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk 11:20 ( 56) What’s New? 11:30 (2) McCpys (4) (Color) Jeopardy (9) Butternut Square 11:50 ( 56) Memo to Teachers (9) News AITERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Color) Call My Bluff (7) Donna Reed (9) Bingo 12:20 ( 56) At the Fair 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) I’ll Bel (7) Father Knows Best 12:35 (56) Spanish I.esson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) Let’s Read 1:00 (2) Jack Benny (4) News (7) Rebus (9) Movie “It’s a Great Feeling” (1949) Jack ('arson, Doris Day 1:10 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (56) Book Parade 1:15 (4) Topics for Today 1:25 (56) Geography 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal (7) One Step Beyond ^1:55 (4) News (56) American History 2:00 (2) Password (4) Moment of Truth (7) FlaVne jn the Wind 2:20 ( 56) Safety Cirde 2:25 (56) Mathematics\. 2:30 (2) Playhouse 2 (4) Doctors "" (7) Day in Court 2:50 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 2:25 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 30 (50) Jack La Lanne 4:00 (2) Secret Storm . (4) (Color) Match Game’ (7) Trajlmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle (50) Movie 4:30 (2) Movie: “Showdown at Boot Hill” (1958) Robert Hutton, John Carradine (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Adventures in Paradise 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot Film trip from North Carolina to Bahamas (7) Movie: “Submarine Spahawk” (1958) John Bentley, Brett Halsey (50) Little Rascals (56) Preparing for Reading 5:30 (9) Rocky and Friends (50) Teen Dance (56) What’s New 5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny 5:55 (2) Sports (4) Carol Duvall Rocky to Seek 3rdN.Y. Term ALBANY, N,Y. Dl-) Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller plans to run for a third term as New York’s chief executive but he hasn’t ruled out a new bid for (he Republican nomination for president. “I have every intention" to run for reelection next year, he told a news conference Tuesday. Asked about another try for the GOP presidential nomination, Rockefeller replied: “1 haven’t ruled it out; I’m just not thinking about it.” Rockefeller was first elected in 1958, scoring an upset victory over Incumbent Democrat W. Avercll Harriman. He was reelected in 1962 by a slightly reduced margin. . in late 1963 and, during the first half of 1964, he campaigned for the Republican nornination for president. He withdrew after losing the California primary to Barry Goldwaler, the eventual nominee. ^ ’ Have 'Gun/ Will Travel ^INESVILLE, Ohio (UPl) — liV^ainst the law to carry a conceMed weapon, b u t Lake Count>^shwiff’s deputies found there isnT carrying a in a car. Gun collector Walter Ysel oJ Eastlake packed a Finnish-made antitank gun into this car Monday when he went to visit his wife at a hospital. Ysel said he was afraid someone would steal it if he left it at home. Deputies stopped him and confiscated the weapon, b u t could find no law against motor transport of a cannon. Ysel got his cannon back. ACIUK« lUrlnkfromuratll 7 Holiday drink 13 “Lily makl of Aatolat" MQuIl-llka 15 Drink of the goda 16 Tiara 17 Child 18 French psychologlal (1857-1911) 20 Worm 21 Rent 22 Weapon (var.) 26 Extraordinary 31 Stale 32 Sluml>er 33 Star In Cygniis 35 Essential being 38 American Indian 39 Indian sotrial class 40 Inslriu'l 42 Observe 45 Debar from use 46 Payable 40 Conceder 51 Apple drink (pi ) 53 Swallow again 54 Beginning 55Smart (coll.) 56 Undertake DOWN 1 U. S. coin 2 011 (comb, form) 3 Thing done 4 Suitable 5 Empower 6 Uncanny 7 Earliest 0 Ankle coverings 9 .Sweetheart (Anglo Ir ) III Plieasant IumxkI II Individuals Brokcn.shire, 66, who iMicamc 12 Jewels known to millions during a radio ly American science group ( career that spanned 41 years, 22 Tcen.ige drink was stricken yesterday In his home. He died Inter in a hospital. He rose from an annnuiieer at radio station WJZ in New York In 1924 to a $l,300-a-week network announcer. On the way up, he broke out of the anonymity and stilted style that was rurrent. BEVKRAGEfI NORMAisi IIROKENSHIRE Ex-Announcer on Radio Dies Used 'Personality' in Newscasting Role SMITHTOWN. N Y. (AP) --Norman Hrokenshire, who created the role of a "per-sonallty” radio announcer, hna dlwf of a heart attack. r r r 4 r r* 7 r 0 iO r IT 13 rr IB 16 17 13 26 21 a 24 28 2! 2T 3T 31 Mi E. 33 ■ 3T 33 40 42 43 44 46 46 47' 46 43 5l 62 63 54 56 56 6 TONIGHT! twontyJlrat y« imtfioutat It lal Drop In and for ttw u. wilcoma rr.......... ion twmal Drop In and thara THE ADVENTURES OE OIIII A HARRIET I1IO f.M. pn 23 Excliunallon of warning 21 Twining stem ‘25 .South African hunting weapon 27 Athena ‘28 Cape 29 Adventure .10 l‘'encing weapon 111 Acrid beverages 37 ('lo.se at band :in I' latflsh 39 Singing groups 41 Beverage from a beau 42 Chalcedony lb ) 4:1 Ell)e Iribuiary 41 Gaelic 46 Rvn . ue> ll:jg-WWJ, SporU Line ■ CKLW: Music 'til Dawn . WJR. Music before Midnight TMURSDAV MORNING s:sg-wjR, Voice of Agri. CKLW, Farm News WqON, News, Aruona. Western 4:IJ-CKLW, Eye Opener 7:(»-CKLW, Mews. Bud Davies ' Bud Davies V-■“— Almanac luslc Halt ^ ws. B. Guest Music '' ‘ ■.♦:0O-WJR, News, Open House WCAR, Jack Sanders t«:M-WWJ. "News, Neighbor WJBK, News. Reid WXYZ. Breakfast Club. Don McNeill . Knight WPON, News. Ron WJR, News. Musk' CKLW. News, Joe > I THURSDAY AFTERNOON I2:00-WJR, News, Farm i WWJ, News, Music' ■ CKLW, Austin GrJnt WPON. News, Ron Knight A'CAR, News, tom Kolllns WHFI, News in Depth WXYZ, News. Music 12: J—WJR, Focus 1:gg--WJR, News, Linfciener CKLW, News, Joe Van WHFI, Encore liJe—WJR, Furness, Abby, Murray 1:M:-WJBK, News, L'ee WPON, News, Lawrence' WXYZ, Dave Prince CKLW, Oeve Shafer WJR, News, Elliott Gazette WHFI. News, Kaledelscopa, . SiOO^WWJ, News WCAR, News, Music 4:38 -WPON, Mutual Sports f I'lIjO IU)N1’IAC^^ WI[‘U)NKH|)AY, MAY ft. lo4 ROEBUCK AND CO I Wllll.l'; ((I’A^'TITIKM l..\K1'! l'l,OOII S.\.>ll>l,l>. I. 2. :( iiiiil l-OI'-.\-KI.\l». OI>l> I.OTK. mi>IOA Vril.\TOIIK . . . AM. A I' I.OW NO nioNi: okoi:rs-(:.o.o..s MIW S\hV. I’llinCN. AM. Alli: >IM IIANH AMA I'l.HI M llandkmiii(‘ls Mni'H (• SxyU .Similling wliilr. Ilif. .i L;iwii Kak(‘H K.K. .awn (iliaii'H 2T’ Only lIKKSMKY S 2 5* Was AI $229.9f> 'l'oolli|>aHl<^ OOc i»i> WIlM-. Only nilie (!r<^w SocliH 26-'' women SocLh 32.^ while t'OlliMi litend. 8ev«I I.illlil (. |>nir White. Only ^Iretoli Btyin, iibii’IiI eolort. I.iiiiit (i |>uii’ ISO MOISKY DOWN on AiirlhiiiK You Huy on (Iretiil ill Seiirnl KKDliCKD *60.95 Kemiioi'<‘ Aiilomalic wmi SI i>s-savi;k! -iitlriir .l.-i.iMKliiliilily, i-iiHy-or iiM' rniliii fN ;iml ilii l-i liii^inf- al.ilily Imm- iiiiKli- Ki iim.m- lli.- wh^Iht mm.M |M-o|>i<- Imy. 2 ^|M-.-ils im.l r>< l.-s ofi.-r iill-ralii'ii- Mifi-ly.'I'oii iiiid lid an-laiii linislii-d. Sa\i-! \ Sale! 2-Piece Suite, Was 199.95 M4ft Modern »tyl« *ofa and chair wifh graceful iloping armi, rovorilble Serofoam cushions. Choice of upholstery fabrics and colors Hurry in! 5-Piece Sectional, Was 249.95 188 Reversible Serofoam cushions. Brown ' tweed with toned stripe on back, plus many others. You save 6ver i6l. No Money Down Aiili.iiialit- Vi aHlu-rs, An Low Ah ... $ I 2') Kockcr Auto. Vi/s.idH-Savt r.. ivy.na S.tOV.V.', A.iio. Vi7S.Hh-Si.vrr ..21 9.8K «229.‘>."> A.ilo. Vi/Si.«h-Savrr . . I.'.V.VV Many Ollirr MoiI.-In Not LlHlrd 54»« table Sale ., i> j sv» ■.>» •» Comiortable Divan bed I/I HU Foam cuihlon. 180 W» 1M.9A ■ ■ mil m.llr..!, PIaj- «^| Sale! Crib Wm 34 .»• 24«» Playpen I2«i Bunk Bed Bed Set Wm 03.80 35IH8 M8 Wasli(‘rs «63 NO MONEY DOV N -$169.96 DIx. Wriiin.-r, 109.!!a Olhcro MwIcIs Kk«Iii<-o«I! KKNMORI] DRWJIS to I* All Fahricbs 79 , Sun Lounge ..... iModrl 14«» Rocker Wm 0.8» A 88 Chair Sale m«ih. tn> ipringt. Twin lii MUtmatohfd Tako-With Take-wUh Sturdy con iCt « c h « T r itructlofi with «n ch«li«, tun cotl 4m«lfd finlih. 4«* Chaise W». 12.88 8«» WhII.. ' 6.99 Steel Bed Frame ...........................d.88 $89 Double Dresser and Mirror...................44.50 ' $289 White Provincial Bedroom Suite ... 3-Piece Set ..............................Sole! $177 ’ 49.95 Matching Nite Stand ...................... $33 ' $249 3-Piece Bedroom Suita .....................$177 Noniiiil heat cycle plus “Air Only'’ for fliiffiiiK clollii-.s and pillows. Built-in htccii. I hc hatiily l.oad-.\-l>oor us a .-lollies shelf. Be early! 30 Slightly Damaged Metal Wardrobes ulupto~50%OIT! tfl.iO.V.-, Kl,.,. Diyrr. B9.88 . High Chair Table Sale W ardrobe w*. u.ss w*. zs.s* 2tt»» 13»« I6»» J4 » 34". rij.tlc lop. 30i48’* THble, Chair Sale WHtnu. |-Inl«h 1|8» Sale! Mattresses and Box Springs 19««" Was 29.95 to 34.95 Wes 39.95 to 49.95 Wes 59.95 to 69.95 *88ch. Hurry 28««* 3988^ In, s«vt| Floor (tyi«, vinyl uphol- snmpUi, damBgadl Soma nawl Ken more Raiitjes Coppertont; Classic Ele<‘tries 119 NO MONEY DOWN on Scar* Eiasy Payment Plan Fully automatic clock-con* trolled oven lets you set it and forget it . . . oven starts, cooks and shuts off. Hurry in tomorrow, save! $399.95 Elec. Classic,.. .329.88 $299.95 Gas Classic____219.00 $179,95 Electric Range. 129.88 Cas Rangctte, As Low As.. 69.00 $149.95 Gas Range______129.88 Just 1 and 2-or-a-Kinii Auto. Defrost Refrigerators Rig 14-cu.-rt'. model! Refrigerator-section with cold control defrosts for you. *196 $219,95 Refrigerator, 12 cn. ft..........: 109.00 12-cu.-ft. Model, Reg. $219.95............189.88 14-cu.rft. ALL Frostlcss Model............219.00 $299.95 Frostless Model, 14 cu. ft........249.00 $419.95 Refrigerator, 16 (!ii. Ft. .... .319.88 Chest or Upright Freezers 199»* IS-cii.-fl. stores ,525 pounds, Iliii-i-y in, save $30.07 on yoi choice. (Juanlities limited! 15-cu.-ft. Freezer, Reg. $219.95.......157.00 $289.95 Coldspot Freezer, 21 cu. ft.... 259.88 Coldspot Room Air Conditioners........... 99.00 Coldspot dehumidifiers^ Whsc. I*rire ... 49.00 Reg. $89.95 Dehumidifler, now............ 79.88 Poytalde Straight-Stitch _____$38 (ionsole Zig-Zag . .. $64 42-Inch Cabinet Sink with faucet, now_qnly . 44.88 '54'Incli Cabinet Sink with faucet, just.....~.. 54.88 66-Inch Cabinet Sink with trim, now only .«<... 84.88 Kenmore_Garbage,Di8p«8er. Wh8e. price-. .'.. .. 19.88 ^Better” Garbage Di8po8cr, now at............3 l.i(8 Renroore Quality Dishwashers, As Low As ....... 99.00 Assortment of “AS-IS” Wall^and^Rase Cabinets, JPortfyble, DishwashfflfteNl Disposers Straight-Stitch Portable Machine,Just.$38 Kenmore Canister Vacuum Clebners, now.... $22 LightweightYacuum .Cleaners, Whse- price .. , $18 Kenmore Floor.Polishers, now only.......... $18 SAVE UP T(Vl50 ON KENMORE FLOOR samples and DEMONSTRATORS $129 Dbl. Sideroom Tent, 9xl8-foot.....97.88 9xll-ft. Umbrella Tent, Regular $79 .... . 59.88 Regular $15.99 Pup Tent, Whse. Price..... 11.88 10-foot Jon Boat, Regular $99.95...... . 79.00 Regular $109.95 Jon Boat, 12-ft........94.00 $159.95 Semi-V Bogt, 12-foot........ 139.00 MANY OTHER ITEMS NOT LISTED $149.99 Port. TV, 19-inch, “As-Is” ...... 99.88 19-Inch All-Channel Portable TV, now.... 127.00 $399.99 COLOR TV, 21-irich, “As-Is”... .299.00 23-inch Console TV, Regular $219.99.... 158.00 $339.99 Console TV W/Doors, 23-inch... 238.00 $329.99 Stereo Radio-Phono Comb...... 258;00 Be Early, Just 1 and 2-of-a-Kind ; ON SAfK AT SEARS WAREHOUSE-481 N. SAGlNAW ST., TOMOBROW...Noon ,9 P.M. ONE COLOR Michigan’s First Completely Enclosed Pontiac Mall Shopping Center . . . Telegraph at Elizabeth Lk. Rd. TWO TIIK rONTIAC ritUSS. WUDNKSDAV, MAY *, lOflJS U CVJ ■ tv»® i\OtS kd ® 3lHf 9 pU on,30 PM ***• yfflEE SNOlrs ■■■'“/''Mreacf A 9'••M. Come Out I • f ••om Tke Fun . May ,f "«??“*»» . S'"”"-. W.J', '**®' ®-'3« A.M. I rfceUfa// Safe May 20 ,... „ ' ^'"''•l MoS,'»=»» P.M. "^U?:J®®®®!30a.M. in '^“"®^"'™"eAJttne72 Camping Show Pontiac Mall Shopping Center .i*r' fW‘‘ i - fji C\ttW "•®** la.!!* w.. 0o\®^ ft\C]l 5>cA' II A9« roN rrA( i’HKss, wkdxksday . mav 5, iim« TiimoK WOW! Greatest Bargains I Ever Shopped! THIRD ANNIVERSARY Hundreds of Brand New, Colorful SPRING DRESSES n or; Values to 19’® *4 Famous LabeKWool/ Brand New, Crepe^ Lined SPRING suits Values to 39’® ^ W O in Designer Styled, Luxury Wool NEW SPRING COATS Values to 39’® wvin >17 Famous Maker, Easy Care NEW SUMMER BLOUSES. Reg. to 7^99 New, Sleeveless Shaker Knit SWEATER SHELLS... Alberts Exclusive, First Quality SEAMLESS NYLON HOSE Nationally Advertised, Assorted Styles FAMOUS MAKER BRAS Reg. to 7.99 Reg. to 5.99 WOW! 3.88 3 “®1 1.99 Reg. $1 Pair Three Piece, Double Wool SPORTSWEAR'GIVE-AWAY' KNIT Brand New, Famous Maker Plaid, Solid, Novelty ,, ENSEMBLES sprincBseparates • Reg. 39.98 • Skirts •” Slacks • Jackets • Vests V4o// Values to 7.99 mm: $2Q WOWl 959 mm up roi It 'nil-: roXyriAc I’HKSS. \vf,i)m:si)Av, may -s. hmjs Velma Morgan Clair* Hall Ernest Koch Cunningham Drugs rir: James Porker Father & Son Shoes Madeline Botza Albert's j. R, Thompson tloweilbnd Donnell Thomas Donnell Hair SlylitI Morge Griffin Soin A Waller Robert Wiltbold Pontiac Mull Hosidant Mgr. Poul Kanler Highland Appliance Eldon Gardner Sherwin-Williams Ingrid Gustavson Ponliac Travel Service Robert Greening Hudson's Budget Store The Managers At The Mall... Wc woiihl like lo introduce to you", llu; niaiiiifiers of the stores in The Mall. With the never-ending task of bringing you more ami better merchandise, we seldom have on opportunity to meet our customers personally. We are using this means to let you know who we are and possibly become belter ae4}uainled. We like to feel that you visit The Mall because, iii addition to finding just what you want at the right prices, you enjoy the friemlly atnios(>herc and the pleasant surroundings. Thank you, from each of us and oiir emidoyees, for three very sueeessful years at The Mall . . . and please consider thig an invitation lo come in and tell us how we can improve our services to you. Sherman Becker Becker's Shoks r's Sho^ Gordon Beckman Hyghet-Hotcher-Suffrin Manny Fox Rose Jewelert Jean Willis Crocker's Candy Jack Brenlter Grinnell't Joseph Mudloff Superinte'ndenl of Operations Harry Bandy Tandy Craft Thelma Butler Miami Bake Shop Emanuel Christofis Singer Sewing Center Jean Campbell Richards Boys & Girls Wear Dr. Paul Feinhorg Pontiac Mall Optical Center Art La Barge Oilligan Norman Sherman Gladys Strom Empire Shoe Repair Arden Shop Dayton Patterson Community Nat. Bank William Finger Fingers jof the Moll William Stedman Bond Clothes Fred D. Schunck Montgomery Word Ray Smith Kresge't THE !»()NTIAC VRESS. WEDNEKDAV. MAY rt. HMl« FIVE B >5 AIL-PIMA WHITE SHIRTS Sfor’lO Savir $r> on throe-it’a like geUitig on« alni l KUKK! liontr Hta|)lo rMmii colion hroiulcloUm with cxlra-hi IuhIi'C, «?xlr«-l>l tcnailo HtrcoKlh, exlia toiay tubb-ability. lt«i|^ular or lab collars. WASH-N WEAR 65% DACROr 35% COHON 2 for*7 Klitc of all waah-atid-wcar Hporlawoar sportsters — with neat vent cnlf balf-sleeves, matiy with embn>i-(lered motif iMX'kets, Choice of 10 colors or white. Snap up at least 2—now! |'4.98PRE-CUFFED SLACKS I 2 pairs 7.75 Ivy style (’otton 'I’will Chino with lot.s of slim taper. Sinooth plain-front .ttyliriK, hell lo()i).s, and pia'-eulfed in your exact length. Easy/tub-bing tan, black or olive. \ UNDERWEAR BUYSIv^ 89f T-Shirt; Cotton knits..........6 for $4.60 79f Cotton-knit Undershirts.6 for $4Jdo 79f Cotton-knit Briefs ...6 for $4.00 79V Cotton Broadcloth Boxer Shorts.6 for $4.00 NOW THRU SATURDAY SUITS FAMOUS"CAVAUER”CASUAlS Reduced from ^6.99 2 PAIRS 11 Allerations without chargi Just say Xharge W' f NEW TROPICALS i NEW MID-WEIGHTS $ NEW REGULAR WEIGHTS BOND’S PONTIAC MAIL: SIX TIIK I*<)NTIA(' I*1IK,SS. WKDNF.SDAY. MAY li. lOflft Grinnell-made LEONARD Console Piano specially priced Crafted in Grinnell's piano factory at Holly, this beautiful console will fill your home with music for many years to come. The "Slim line" walnut cabinet Is only 22" deep, 40" high and 57Vz" long. Full 88-note keyboard, richly resonant tone. $499 bench extra RCAViCrOR COLOR TV special includes everything! ALL FOR You'll get a new thrill when you see vivid "LIVING COLOR" on this outstanding console. It has automatic Color Purifier, 25,060-volt chassis for extra power, all-channel UHF, VHF tuning and two speakers for "Go[den Throat" FM sound. Solid wood cabinet. •Delivery, Installation, 90-Dayt Home Service & t Year Parts Warranty Included. $565 No down payment required SAVE nSO FABULOUS FISHER STEREO R«fl.$795 »645 This Is your opportunity to acquire a Fisher Homq Music Center ot berified savingsl Deluxe features: • FM-AM radio • Garrard Automatic Record Changer e Twd independent'3-woy Speaker Systems (six speakers) e 70-waff stereo amplifier with solid state circuitry • Walnut. STEREO RADIO PHONO with REMOTE SPEAKER & STAND ALL FOR nS8 No down payment required Enjoy true stereo in this Phonola porlabiel Three speakers (one remote with 12' cable), automatic record changer, sfereo FM-AM radio . . . with Stand and 36-album Record Rack Save 34.80. No down poyment required WORLD-FAMOUS GOYA GUITAR Goya was ttie guitar used In the movie "The^Sound of Music". Its tone is rich and resonant. The beautiful m^el shown here is only \ 139.50 GRINNELL'S-PONTIAC AAALL and DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ^ Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Wan (90 Day Same as Cash) pr Budget Plan 'I'HK I'ON'I IAC I'HK.SS. WKDNKSDAV. MAY 5. Sf»0rt SKVK.N We Tliank You! \ I'ON'riAC' MALL OPTICAL Cl’N'l'I'R Muy Yir oiii' ((I'litiliidn lo our iiiiuiy iiiiliriilN iiiul rririidM for roiili'il>iiliii|ic l<» iinollirr «iir-\<-)‘HHrul yriir. Wr fiii'llirr ilriii-y«lr <»iir iti'orrNhioniil ««*rvirrii tf» iiHMiirr you llir uIiiionI in ryo r^rr. DA DAIII, I i.lNItKIU; orKMiicruisr > (Vt UAMINATIONS • rUHtON FMMIS FOR THI FAMILY > CONTACT LtNSCS > AAFITT OLASSM > MPAIRS WHIII YOU • IHOF ' miCRIPTION »UN OUSIIS Center 6B2-H13 — COUPON — ANNIVKKSVKY SAM,! HEARING AID BAHERIES BUY ONE PKG. GET SECOND PKG. FOR 1 Limit 2 per customer with this coupon. Pontiac Mall Hearing Center (In With Pontiqc Mall Optical Conlet) &0(yk Mook^ !N«‘vl T<» l*oiilia<* IVIall Opiir'al (ioiilt'i* AIIIIiversary S[MM‘ial 30% OFF (i\ i:vi;i! Y III IIIII liiiiik 'riioiisamls ol lillt^s l«> rliooMr* IViFm. On<‘ of lh<‘ liii'^«‘sl srl« of pa-p<‘i’l>a(‘k l»o«>ks ill Oaklaml (imiiily. *Prlc« ot 3rd hooli lo l>« » tiuin ptl( • of •itliwr <>( I kl l«o Iio.fIi* You're x\^\\.h^%^Vhit€ St^\ "FREE GIFT WRAP' Give "'Mother” the sportswear she will wear all Summer . . . IVkiteStag SHORTS, PANTS, SKIRTS, TOPS, JACKETS, BERAAUDAS in easy. - care coot sailcloth iti colors she loves ^5 to ^11 KNIT TOPS and SHIRTS ^3 to ^5 in inatching colors these are exciting Gifts for Mother's Day" Sunday, May 9th RAINCOATS YOU WILL NEVER BELIEVE THE PRICE! Seldom do you find surli coots ns • ■■■,<■ in tills quolil/ and fosliioi; ot ili.. 'ow price. A variety of patterns ond .‘djis. PONTIAC MALL - SHOP, EVERY NITE 'TIL 9 BIRMINGHAM - SHOP THURS., FRI. TIL 9 Kr<;ii r rilF, PON'l'IAC’ I'HFSS. WFnXFSDAV MAV 5. IIMII RICHARDS BOYS & GIRLS WEAR ... MAY DAYS are PLAY DAYS / \ Durini; ^ our 3rd ! SELL-A-BRATION Choose "fun wear" from Richards Complete PIsploys Featuring America's foremost Name Brands. The New Catalina SWIM SUITS are Here Full stock of newest creotions for Toddler's - 3 to 6x, 7 1o 1 4 and pre-teens. $298 $1298 Farah and Billy the Kid WASH SLAX $298 $41 Slims and regulars in tlie 3 to 7 and 8 to I 4 ranges. Including now "no iron" slacks. 98 To Donmoor COLLAR POLOS Also Jac Sliirts Large selection. Sixes 4 to 7 and 8 to 14. $029 To Billy the Kid, Health-tex SHORTS iefy. All qual- »t 98 To Celebrating • PUYMORE • CATALINA * GARTER’S KNITS $*|98 Coordiitalt th«m wttti $^96 Shorts .. Pants. . Kniti and Danimt. $050 liiai 3 fK and 1 14 . . jL Dnum are sweeter la Carter^ cael Snnmer Skc|tcrf Tuck them in., ever-io-lightly in Carter's two-piece sleepers. Snap-fastened tops and bottoms, because Carter's knows how wiggly children ore. Washing? Thot's o snop, because Carter's thinks of mothers loo. Sixes 6 months to 4 years. KnH cotton sleeper Im Eervice-Stellon print. Nevebind seemless underarms. Bertd frorri pent with eletllc back. Blue, green er yellow print. *2.30 IM oalton and Dacrone polyesler sleeper. Band front pant wlttt elastic back. Aqua or pink. $2.30 FBOM ^ lOOth BIRTHDAY COU.ECTI0M II shoppers convenience! iil . . . our popular Scot’s Room accented by a. unique, ivarm decor to complement the good food always served at Ted’s. Garden Court Cafeteria ... “the Orange Tree” keyno|es an atmosphere—fresh, colorful and spacions-for your pleasant dining and convenience. “Garden Court Cafeteria” ... FAMILIES LOVE TED’S Dinner at the new Ted’s is a “real family treat.” Mother and the Children will love it. Dad will find the moderate prices a true value in dining enjoyment. Ample coflee, compliments of Ted’s-we’re sure you’ll be pleased! m TIIK I*ONTIA(’ 1‘HKSS. WKDMC.SDAV. MAY H, 1005 NIN K doiiiidiv FASHION COIF CUSTOM SlYLED 1X> YOU, IN NATUHAI-, PASTEL, OR shocking COLORS ... (niMiiKfl your liair as oasily as yon change your cosliiiiie! These wigs are hiiniuu hair, so life-like they can be worn willioiil ilelee-lioii, in their natural hair shadca. Otlr stylists are H|>erially trained in wig styling. So exciting you’ll want one the iniuute you see it, so inex|»ensive you’U want several. Wift Iiiid CiiHtom Styling, complete: wm; siior donnell L'50 donnell’s 6J52-0/I20 A|t|M>intments Not Always Ncccasiiry /U Taiiilj Crafts in The Mall. . FREE MARBLES WITH THIS COUPON To Children With Their Parents Limit One Coupon Per Child Let's Do mHERCftm! HERE'S A GENUINE LEATHER BILLFOLD KIT AS A STARTER! ONLY ...M. wttn coupon below WORTH »350 AFTER YOU ASSEMBLE AND LACE, ONLY io* IF YOU ACT NOW/ Your choice men’s or ladles’ stylel YourkItTs ready to assemble and lace, np experience necessary. The design is already embossed. So easy to assemble . . . a child can do. "^his coupon ExpireTMaj^ Brtni orms .STATE- 391 N. Teleeraph Pontiac, Mich. Tandy Grafts SorofooliMl siinmier fiiiil Ilia's n pl( iiir, with com-luiliililn loiwiis III your laoll ?ii k yiii/i pal stylo (ll Kiiinay, Inmi ii mlnliiiw ol livoly <(il(H5. ( >r i)a| (ill lliay'in pi i( ad so i a(noneilila. All Wosli -obla. All Amar k on tiioda. Si/as ^ 10, widlli iior-row Olid mednmi. rainbew of canvas Kin-I-Kins New, Improved scientific lost — more support for growing feet • Cushion arch and insole • Anti-scuff toe cap • Durable canvas duck • Completely washable • American-mode • Children's sizes 5-1 2 (Also misses' and boys' 12''2-3) • Navy, Red, White, Black, Brown, Light Blue ^ WHERE- THE FAMILY SAVES IN STYLE Tl'-N TIIK. I’ON I'IAr l*1(KSS. WKDNK.SDAY. MAV 11)05 Poiiliitc Mall Slioppiii^ Arden Shops Inc. Anniversary SALE! OWENS CORNING Fibvrji^las DRAPERIES Krfi. .S7.ni IMOW $ 499 i}rxir>'’ Aiiiiivri*sjii*y Sal<‘ Pi*ir<*d (Aioos<‘ from lli«* oii«‘ illiisiraird ami Iwo ollior <‘\rilin;;ly iMMiilifiil palirriis, niagiiifi-iMMil ill (li‘.si)>ii ami color. Sliop now wliilc slocks ar<‘ coiii|>lclc. IVII IITII SIN( ;ff One anil Oiic-llalf 1)01 IDFF THIPFF 1)11 III II in” 7; 2” 96” Itl” 1. 1/ Kcfi. Sale Kc}i. Sale Hit- Sale Refj;. Sale I r N C 1 II s I.V’ S4.99 $12..t9 $7.99 $16.in $9.99 $;M.9n $19.99 fi.T’ S9.9n S3.99 $i6.9n $9.99 $21.9n $1 1.99 90” SI2.9!5 S6.99 $i7.9n $10.99 $22.9n $12.99 ALL-yUlLTED BEDSPUEAD • Dcaiilifiil (Crystal Acclalc Fain ic • Eovi'Iy ("otion Floral i’allcrn Keffular $13.98 $ 1299 xow Anniversary Sale PrieeR Color (^oiid Nellie Creek Pillows of Dislinelion jRegr. $2.98 each 2 for «3<>» Solid Colors and Floral I’atlcrns Onler of Interiors Seeurily IlIftT Sei"»iec roiiliac Mall Shopping Ctiiter • Pontiac,-Micliigaii TIM<: roN'I'IAC I’HKSS, WKDNKSDAY, MAY 5, 11X55 ONE COLOR <:i.KVKN Mollier’s Day Is This Siiiiclay, May 9 This Mollu'rs Day jiivc inoiii a Lox of D Crockers Candy lliat is made right liere in our own kitchen ykvilli the finest of ingredients available. Quality is pur way of giving you the best in sweetl CANDY Mom’s Favorites Creams and Boii-Boiis 1 1 ‘A ox. A variety of creamy, taste temi)ling flavors. Crockers’ Pride . . . An assortment of our finest pieces. Fruits, nuts, crunchies, creams and chewies. 2740 Woodward Ave. Open Evenings ’til 8:00 The l^ontiac Mall Open Evenings ’til 9 TVV KI.VK TIIK I‘ON riA(^ I'HKiSS. WKDN KSDA V. MAY 5, IDd.’i 0ve her (lur extra-value $9 Corliss nylon tricot slips A. PHOPOR'I’IONI-D CLASSIC comes in the length Mother needs; short 32 to 38, average 32 to 44, tall 34 to 44. Scallops of embroidery trim the bodice and hemline. Easy-care nylon tricot; white or black. B. FRONT-SHADOW-PANEL slip for her warm-weather fashions. Easy-care Chemstrancl* nylon tricot.'^Nylon lace at bodice and hemline is lined with nylon sheer. White or petal pink; sizes 32 to 44. C. CONTOUR-BODICE slip fits even better because of the three inches of elastic at back of strap. Bodice trimmed with lace and nylon sheer; lace at hem. Chemstrand* nylon tricot. White, pink; sizes 32 to 40. style B., C. nwtlim Untrric IVi>artms ped sleeve top and long pants in rose or blue print on white ground. White cotton knit jacket ttTnimed in tnatebmg Tlbol print. Discontinued style is value-priced It only $5! Sires 34 to 40. she loves to dream in erisp, $ A pretty cottons like these <1 style B A. HAND I:MBR0IDI:RI:D YOKI: makes this cotton plisse gown so very dainty. Scallops of embroidery and smtK’king matcli the floral print. Rose or blue rosebuds on white background. Waltz length. Small, medium, large. B. THIv Bl.lll' DI!NIM-I.Q0K in a little shift for sleeping that can just as ■well take Mother through the day. Grip|>er* .snaps down (he front, two rotimy pockets. Collar and armholes touched with blue-and-vihite stripes. S. M. L. C. THC CLASSIC NKiHTSHIRT comes with matching panties. Shirt has a neat little Bermuda collar, rolled sleeves. ITiere's a mock monogram embroidered on the |H>cket. Red or bhie stri(>es on white background. Sizes small, medium, large. S1«*«*liwrAr —ronilac >l»ll ' style A. PantiMuc 3taii Ol H I'KKX 'I’liK roN'riAc ruKSs. wkdm'-sdav. may .y 0>iebrattng Ponttae MalPs Hudson' brand proportioned nylons fiMlionolff/ advpriiH4*d 4f:4V. SI AMLI SS MICRO-MHSH DRKSS SHEliRS. Rose Glow, (loldcn Rei};e. (i.iy Taupe, Calypso;; ^Yz'^^^Vz M, 9’/2 11 I . 10'/, I 1' XT. Some Wootlhue, white. ?> pr. 2.91,6 pr. 5.76 STAMI TSS PI.AIN STITCH DRESS SHEERS. Rose (ilow, (iohten Rtigc, Ciay 'I'aupe, Calypso; 8’/2-10'/2 S, S'/^-ll M, 9'/.-II I.. l0'/,-ll'/2 XL. 3 pr. 2.91, 6 pr. 5.76 #43. SI AM! I SS W’AI.KINC; SHEERS. Rose (ilow, Gay Taupe wweies. Sizes H'/, to l()'/2 short, 8I/2 to 11 medium, 9’/2 long, 10.'/2 to 111/2 extra long. 3 pr. 2.91, 6 pr. 5.76 #54 STAMTT) VC'AI KING. SHEERS. Rose Clow, Golden I3eige, (lay Taupe. S'/j to 10 short, 81/2 to TI medium, 9'/2 11 long, l()'/2 to 111/2 extra long. 3 pair 2 91, 6 pair 5.76' #60. SEAMED DRESS SHEERS^ Shaded of Rose (ilow. Golden Beige, (lay Taupe. S^tr78'/2 to 10 short, 81/2 to 11 medium, 9'/2 to 11 Ipng. 3#tfir for 2.91, 6 pair for 5.76 ercry color hi et ery size or length. ■ot«U'r> IfudMoii'ts Hiitlifrl Stai^re—TontJac MiUI «l e n i m phiffpaniH 2..H7 ,/.J7 New (oloi look in cotton twill denims ... in wheat, white, lo«len and fadetl blue. Misses sizes 8 to 16. lioth stales have front zip, snap wacsts with hell loops; fdiir pockets. SAt^K. vhunei - foole Mrtnnvn's Htr0»niers 7JW NI'.VT popcorn-textured Orion* acr)'lic in fashion-smart shades of white, black, lilac, aqua, pink. Eighi,weight warmth for cool Spring and Summer day.s. Sizes 40 to 44. Also jn white ivitb emhroitleretl mdtij, S.ltft M^aniiac Mnit TirK- l*()N'HA( PHKSS, \VK-I)NKS[)AV, MAV f>. I1H$5 I’ll'IK ION Cushioned arches and insoles tor foot- easy eomtort, nuyyed \“ canvas uppers, non-f kidding rubber soles. Something new has been added to fun-time tennis shoes! Bright colors in plaids, stripes, polka dots, patterns and solids! Save plenty during Pontiac Mall's 'I'hird Anniversary Sale for Summer fun, camp or vacation. All have canvas uppers, rubber soles. Cushioned arches and insoles for bouncy comfort. Sizes 8>/2 to 12 and 12in. lightweight 3-speed dragster bicycle twIst-grIp bicycle a a Own a ••compact"! Hi-ris. ^0 00 Fully equipped, top^quolity AAftft 88 handlebar; droq treqd rear 0^88 Haw|h^-,mt 3o“" ■' brakes, whitewall tires. Boys’, red; girls’, aqua. Own a "compact"! Hi-rise handlebar; drag-treqd rear tire; • coaster brake. Flamboyant red cantilever frame machine-welded for safety. 26-INCH TMK I'ONTIAC PUKSS, WTA)XKSI)AV, MAY 1. lOO/V TWi;n rv riinKK BIC *15 SAVINGS! I. Wards 20-inch rotary mower with Vacuum-Action catcher Sale [ndf Sat., May SIh, 9 P.M. Your Choice! 2*4 20-10-5 WEED « FEED REG. 3.99 ALL 1/ ROSES 72 Price America's favorite -colorful, fragrant! Usually bloorns 7 to 8 weeks after planting. Well - known variettes. GLADIOLUS-BIG COLOR CHOICE! Finest quality! Bulbs produce flowers that are ideal for cutting or for creating colorful borders and beds. POWER TO SPARE! WARDS 26-INCH ROTARY TILLER Slices through tough {obs! Turns, bocks, dodges with ease! Rugged, 4-HP Briggs & Stratton engine; effortless, Easy-Splh starting. On special display now! no moniy down $ 119 REG. 139.99 I'VVK.N rv I-()UU 'I’liK, PON'riAc pin*:ss. wkdnp^sday. may i, \ma 9 l».M. M ONTGOMERY WARD now with Teflon 24.99 SIGNATURE BRAND ELECTRIC SKILLET-FOOD NEVER STICKS, PAN RINSES CLEAN! • Foods fry perfectly without grtaie o No spatula noodod to romovo food • Eosiost cleon>up over—|ust rinso Cook anything from omelets to pot roasts on this non*stick table*top cookor. Has extra-high lid; immerses for cleaning. "Charge It”! OViMROlUII AiMomaticallybakes,roa»ls, brails, toasts. Heat-proof window. Rack and tray remove. Chromed. 15.99 CURVED-LEG IRONING TABLE YOU WANT TEFLON-LOOK at OUR PRICE! YOUR CHOICE 99L Yes, look! And look again! Whoever heard of a price so low for fine quality, miracle-coated aluminum cookware that requires no grease, yet never sticks, and cleans with a sponge-rinse under running water—never needs scouring! If you really want to save time, work and money, get these four most-often-used pans at Wards, and get rid of messy scour pads for good! You can’t lose! Reg. 11.99 Deluxe 1100-vent top, and 24-36'^ height adjustment make ironing easier. Self-fevoling front foot, attached cordset, rear wheels. WARDS 6-SREED BLENDER-SAVE! DuPONT TEPLON COATED 3299 Handles mixing jobs with easel Powerful motor with removoblo stainless steel blades, 46-oz. plastic jo' Moke 4 big waffles or reverse grids for eggs or sondwichesT Batter overflow groove, pilot W9hM3'/2xl2?4x4'/2^ TIIK PONTIAX' rUKSS, WKDNKSDAYv MAY 5. VMMi rWKN I'Y I'lVIC COMPARE FEATURES: • Save time—wash more each load, less each week I • 2-speed washing, 2-speed rinsing . . . 6 wash cycles for every type of washable fabric • V/a$h 2 to 15 lbs. using exact amount water needed • King-size filter continuously traps lint WARDS EXTRAS AT NO EXTRA COST! FREE DEUVERY No cost for delivery, right to your door. NO MONEY OOWN Take up to 3 years to pay on crediti PROMPT SERVICE Efficient help when you need it, as near os yopr phone. Always low costi Signature 4500 BTUair conditioner COMPAM WARDS LOW PRICII •109 • Cools an average bedroom—180 sq. ft. • No mugginess—dehumidifies 4.2 gals, day • 1-speed cooling as quiet as a gentle fan R Washable foam filter; rust-resistant cabinet • Installs In windows 21 to 41 Inches wide Matching Electric Dryer .. M59 Matching Gas Dryer . . . . M89 SIGNATURE RANGE FOR ’65 30-INCH GAS MODEL HAS A SMART BUILT-IN LOOK •169 RE0.5199 ---- NO MONEY DOWN • Slips-in to look built-in, with no costly remodeling problems • 24-inch automatic-lighting oven with lift-off door for cleaning • LifNup top for easy cleaning, clock-timer, appliance outlet • Gleaming white or modem copper-tone finish, same low price’ Signature 14 cu* ft* refrigerator-freezer • Frostless, no defrost refrigerator section • Glass-covered crisper e 163-lb. bottom freez6’r, ''bookshelf door storage ■ . \ - ' ' n€ ..... $ 238 REG.$269 T\VKN'rV SIX rm-: I'ON'riAc' phi-:ss. wkdnksdav, may i5>(5f> itii, 9 r.iw. A/VoNToioMERY WARD Big 10x20-Ft. Patio Cover No better buy at this price! SAVE NOW WARDS ALL-ALUMINUM 5-FOOT STEP LADDER 8 99 Safety-built of rugged, lightweight aluminum. Wide, non-slip steps; mar-proof feet; handy pail shelf. 6' lac^der Save Now . . . .9.99 • Smart embossed aluminum cover keeps new-looking for years • Galvanited steel mounting rails, understructure for added strength • Cover complete with distinctively-styled decorative scroll posts Add to outdoor pleasure with Wards quality patio cover at a price far less than you’d expect! Its distinctive scroll posts give it the look of covers costing much more. And it's extra-strong, too. Features a painted facia, easily-aissembled overlapping panels and a built-in rain gutter. NO MONEY DOWN SPRING TIME IS THE TIME FOR "PAINT UP” TIME IT’S THE EASY WAY TO PAINT! And time-savers are a real help during the holiday seasoni Super Latex is easy to apply with d brush or roller... just one coat usually covers. Since it dries In minutes, you can replace your furniture the satne day you paint. Its tough finish resists stains and fading, can be washed repeatedly. Choose from white and 20 decorator colors. . Hiww't no ''paliiiy odor Toofa), Imnhot tmi ipoK oMt Sopor Lalox... and tort ora oo^rlo dopn up kdriolln pilSO mEiMmI wM soap and wator. — 89c ROLLER TRAY Woolly-type, 7-In. roller with metal troy. For oN-bote ..i-. or latex ptiints. If TIIK IH)NTIA(’ I’lnCSS. WKDNK.SDAV. MAY -i. llMlrt 'l'VVK,N I'Y SICVKN Crystal chandelier buy Use Wards convenient Charg-AII’ credit plan Five-light chandelier has solid center column ^7 Off on Wards own five-light chandelier Beautiful imported crystal, hand-cut and polished. 17" high, 1 8" wide. Bronze costings. On display now. 42” Reg. 49.99 Elegance is now modestly priced at Words! This gracious chandelier features: 5 brilliant lights, solid center column, magnificent cut crystal that accents any h.omel Truly a mark of expert craftsmanship ond beauty that will be admired by friends and family for years and years to come. See a sparkling array of many other styles too ... at Wards. w^Signature central j^air conditioning jii^30,000 BTU, 2 iiihlwt-iglit lircH, IttMulix ItrakeH. Hoyb’ in fliiiiic red. Save now! Thurs., Fri.fSat. Only—Keg. 2.88 50-Ft. VINYL HOSE %” ri)., oi>a<|iie green jdaH-lie. Soli«l brass eouplings. A nuiHt if you want l«» operate 2 sprinklers at once! 2 33 Charge It NYLON-REINFORCED HOSE .W-ft., J/j” I.D. Slavs flexible even in . cold weather. Won’t Btiffen and “fight back”. Keinains easy to coil. 3 33 Charge It JtMtMM I URESGE COUPON 1= RIGHT GUARD DEODORANT KING SIZE With Coupon LIMIT TWO jMMMI KRESGE COUPON COUPON f TEXTURED NYLONS Reg. $1.00 Value With Coupon i LIMIT FOUR SpgPX33| KRESGE COUPON COUPON 20-GALLON GARBAGE GAN only With Coupon pyiTWim LIMIT TWO CANNON TOWELS LARGE SIZE - ABSORBENT STRIPES AND SOLIDS With Coupon Reg. .59c Value 41 f limit FOUR b h o p w 11 0 u t cos sh_ "CHARGE IT" AT RRGSGE‘S- rM'K, l*ONTlAr PUKSS. WKDNKSIVAY,' MA\' H. tlM.-J rWPN'rV NIKP Sensational savings on these specials Thursday,Friday and Saturday Extra Value! New low Prices! MOTORIZED WAGON GRILL 15 97 McimIIk litr(|iioi«^ fife Ik>« • lloOil with wainttnji ovrii, )>r»it intHuit^ * Tttiii ifiTiiiiir Iimmp iiKicil iiecl litlri • Vi'iili IirmI* wool! ni(tin/| »m! ulumi* iium uu^c |nH • 4 rL>»inoti chfoiiir jiikl riv« Potitiont Non tilt fcutwr* 24" BRAZIER GRIU. with Hood, Spit, Acfustable Grid Movci cmily on 4'/i* wiitti*. I^gi fuM fcr compnii nor- $088 •JC. l inger lip tonirol allowi you to nrljuit linght ol ih« ’ Wm thfomc pUlcil grill, tliinmt jiliiinl »pj| iiunf rncut evenly, WW Silver peinleil hood, ineullic Mue 1 owL ‘ Folding Lightweight ALUMINUM FURNITURE CHAIR 297 ^97 ^ Stinnyxlay uvingt on |»«r»o of frame j. Arnw arc comfon^My wide. So lawn piccis! Ok>1 looking Inmiture of am! easy lo liandicl I'iuli piece lirmly wc1>IkxI green and while polypro- IoIl!.' intoa <-oin|>aa imii for Storage. pyknc plastic on 1'* tubular aluminum Chaise K>tmgc adjusts to five j>osi(iL>n<. 17 X as*' TUFFLEX BACK COHON SEAT CUSHION.... .1.77 21 X 72' TUFFIEX CHAISE PAD WITH PlllOW.....2.77 WOVEN PLASTK WEBBING RE NEW KIT, 17 ft......47^ CHAISi 97 ROCKKR 97 % Big 20” Breeze Box 2-SPID /5" Ilijt’h and low speed settinj^s. Big fan power at an economy pried Jk‘ige baked enamel ease and grill. 3 Aluminum prop blade*. 1-Yr. motor warranty. 4600 CFM ^DUMBSonaa^ 4 IB^ia.11wiIt/^ADn ! IRONING BOARD and COVER WITH COUPON ?s gQ4u. both dv ea. silicone cover, lotex-bock pad. KRESGE COUPON P™ 10 PACK SPECIAL TOILET TISSUE AH. Bile 64' with c«*ii/xm 650 sheet rolls - white or pastels LIMIT ONE mpci KRESGE COUPON^™ LEADING LADY FACIAL TISSUE 200 2-ply tissues 2 boxes 25** WJTII CO I TON LIMIT 4 KRESGE COUPON p°a CLEANING SKINS WITH COUPON Reg. 93* 67« Chamois-type sheepskin. Approx. 14x20" fessss i LIMIT 4 13 oz. Aquahet HAIR SPRAY 2b..n mm coiir(c\ I f*i*MWTTq LIMIT 2 1 KRESGE COUPON 24” Chiffon SQUARES Reg. 39c Value Ir I'lif covroN c NYLON CREPE LIMIT 4 SHOP WITHOUT CASH - "CHdRGB H" AT KRESGE’S TMIUTV 'I'llK, l‘()NVriA(' I'UKSS. WKDN KSDA V. MAY n, IIMM WHERE YOU KNOW...THE PRICE IS LOW Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center — S. Telegraph Tel Huron Center, 3 S. Telegraph - Pontiac Mall Shopping Center, N. Telegraph Birmingham, Maple at Woodward -- Rochester, 1451 N. Main Clip & Sa ve! WITH THESE MOHEY-SAVIHG COUPONS VALUABLE COUPON . M m-m DELICIOUS ORAHGE SLICES FULL POUND Liinil rr\2 with coupon 22 Couporv ^00OITt Sfptot listed above. Coupon cxpittus Muy H, 1965. VALUABLE COUPON R|EGULAR 1.50 UDY GILLEHE RAZOR with BLADES limit 1 with coupon 1.11 Coupoft qood only SI)AY. MAY !i. rmin YONK Strawberry CHEESE CAKE 59.1 Try Our Variety of 12 BREADS Bake Shoppe We Specialize in BIRTHDAY and WEDDING CAKES SAM & WALTER INTERNATIONALSPECIALS POLISH KIELBASA ^olMd (with carlic), Roasted (No Oarlic), Froth (non smoked with carlic). 69' GERIHAN BRAUfISCHWEIGER v (SMOkod Liver lauMfo)............ 09' n^ALIAH GEROA SALAMI..............1.19 KOSHER-STYLE COOKED CORHED BEEF____1.99 FABERS OLD HEIDELBERG BRARD BOILED HAM.„ .SKIHLESS VIERRAS.............49* VISIT "MR. SAM'S KITCHEN" for BAR-B-Q CHICKENS - RIBS HOT COFFEE - SANDWICHES "Carry Got" 682-9811 "Carry Out" Bring a sample of your water to the Culligan Testing Lab in the North end of The Pontiac Mall For a FREE analysis Oor representative at The Mall Testing Lab will be glad to show you the latest in water conditioning units if yoortest shows a need for it. Sales and Rentals Convenient Terms . . Easily Arranged Culligan Water Conditioning 925 Orchard Lake'Ave. FE 4j9944 ... Let Us Give You That WELL-GROOMED LOOK! Ghod groomiirg it ettenlial for tuccett ifi butinott and personal life. AAake a neatly-styled haircut by our expert staff a weekly habiti 8 CHAIRS . . . NO WAITING Open Till 6 Every Night (Closed Wednesdays) TUI 5 on Saturday BAIRD’S BARBER SHOP IN THE MALL SEE US FOR COMPLETE SHOE REPAIR SERVICE Look At Your Shoes!!! EXPERT SHOE REPAIRING . . . While You Wait or While You Shop Frequently your old shoes con be revived and give you many more months of wear. Wo also tpecioliie in hand and machine stitching of handbags, belts, luggage, gloves, leather jackets, etc. Come in today. Empire Shoe Repair Open 9:30 A.M. Till 9:00 P.M. Mon. Thru Fri. QualiCraft Funshiners’ Viiia-. io..k, l•|•;m(ly brown Icatlicr uppers llione.>|rip|»e(l an.] ed{;ey koss Ou'lldvtiOfi, You will Irnvol l)ifom|h lllitu.i.v Mr.MHHl, KdhMts, Coloro.lo, Mt.w Mtwi. o, MuL>, Ut.ih You'll vtMl I liinnyl. ipii I, llio li)4 AmjfltJI Idlinrit's MfU^tJl, Smtlo HdilxlKt, Monlf^tery, Yonntiulf^J.itlaiMil IVitk otui Son IVtincUco. Phono or stop In loJuy l«u .ill lh« ■ cieloiU.'.■ .- - ...... ■. Scandinavian Holiday ''PUtNE':' Leave Pontiac June 10... Return July 1 ONLY $1,175 PER PERSON •,nM(i ff it is our pIiMisuio !o offer a compinto s. un.liiuivliin lout pn iii> illy liy Mrs. Chtortjo A. Doiin. Tho lour will huivn [)t>lroil on .Itiim lOlh lo New York llunt n (juit k Jot flhjlil across iho Atlonlic to Co[»nnhn(jnn. OnnOuirk. I xpf’iirru fil liovnlitHS nnjoy (Im frlnmllinrtss (HhI (loonllnnss of tho S< omlliuivintis, Ihny nnjtiy tim ox.ollniit holoks, fitta food niiJ Imdutilul Sfonoty in (irmimik, Norwoy (iiiil Sw(!(htfi. \ Pontiac TRAVEL SERVICE Pontiac Mai 682-1 220 702 W. Huron . . . FE 8-9611 r~ HAPPY BIRTHDAY! Celehralitig Our 3rd Year at The Pontiac AAall! DON'T BRING US ANY GIFTS, PLEASE WE HAVE ONE FOR YOU ... A BEAUTIFUL WHITE PEARL TIE PIN WITH EACH PURCHASE Tonight, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Only! none higher From Designer's Table Direct to You ANNIVERSARY SAVINGS H' <■ s / THIS IS A LAMP? Y. ; this is the new LAMPETTE This brilliantly designed, high-intensily lamp concon* tratos glare-free, pure-wliile light just where you need it-aml then Iclescopcy into itseif for lightweight porta> bilily! I\'i fcct for school, home, ofllcc, traveling. jFulIy adjustaldc, 2-position switch. Ideal for desk, hobby bench, drawing or vanity table and for wall-hanging. Gray, while or black with satin-llnish chrome. Moe including bulb. 90 In Open Slouk Reg. 85^ 1 l ap l.eller Reg. 1.00 1 riiK. ftwHopet O r** .1. Reg. 450 OO^ ONLY ^9.95 RIG 12 INCH GLOBE IN TRUE-TO-LIFE COLORS Shows the world as it really is — helps give under-standiiig of relationship between earth formation and national boundaries, excellent for hdme or office. Regular $9.95 value ......noW *6.99 MARBLE BASE DESK ACCESSORIES 88^= Pen Perpetual calendar Pencil well Letter rack Pipe rack each JUST ARRIVED Large selection of quality picture frames. Regular 70c to $4.00 per foot. . . now at thirty to fifty percent savings. BLACK - WALNUT - FRUITWOOO - GOLD - OTHERS PLASTIC COATED - DOUBLE DECK PLAYING CARDS In ReuiabU Cato Reg. $2.00 . NOW • SEVERAL DESIGNS • WIP' CLEAN Complete Line of “IDEAI^ PUBLICATION” SO" to • MOTHER'S DAY • FATHER'S DAY • GRADUATION • MEMORY IDEALS • SUMMERTIME • IDEALS SCRAPBOOK S|S0 682-0411 TIIK. l‘()N'riA(’ rilKS,S. WKDN'KSDA V, MAY r., • ruin I V i iiHKi', WITH THESE Sherwin-Williams RUST CONTROL PAINTS RUST CONTROL PRIMER #49 Effective piimer i»^ for metal and ornamental iron surfaces. SPRAY ENAMEL Easy way fo paint. Covers areas brushes can't touch. ENAMELOID* *jUinaofi> lllEheSf quality, IiIeIi-gloss enamel. Extremely rust resistant. ALUMINUM SPAR ENAMEL #29 BriEht aluminum and durable spar varnish In ready Mixed lorm. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS ALL YOUR SPRING-TIME FAVORITE SHOES ON SALE . . . TllimSDAY, hRWAY AND SATUIWAY OMA Natural Poise regular to $14.99 DRESS SHOES . . Petite Debs regular to $10.99 DRESS SHOES . . Tempos regular to $8.99 SPORTS • FLATS All Inrl Mol in ovoiy ;.iyl«. $090 $690 $090 3 big chiys lo stock up and save on a icnsallonal lamed brand sliorr wnrdrobel You'll choose from the season's smartest shoes . . . (rastel crrrd (iretty or nifty ond neutral lor color exclterrtent Irom'sliShder high heels to' furr loving flats. See them rrow and saved U>« Your Alborti Chargs Account Becker’s Birthday Bonus!!! Tonight, Thursday, Friday and Saturday ’til 9 ALL SHOES ARE FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK OF FAMOUS QUALITY SHOES! Due to monufaeturers' policy . . . Florshetm and Hush Puppies ore trot included in the above offer . . . also nd canvas shoes, flippers, etc. TIIIHTV FOUU TIIF l’()NTIA(’ PHFSS. WKDN KSDA V. MAY 5, 11)«5 to stay free? To stay free a eouniry requires informed eitizens. In \ today's world newspapers are the i>reuf information multipliers. They are the foundation of responsible citizenship on which every free nation depends. LUIS is ten yems ()lil,"l'iiglil lull only luilf liloriito. Unis lives in :t dcvelopinj; j country. It is :i connlry cnKTf;ing from poverty, ignonince, political instability and disoriler, sirnggling to enter the 2()tli century world of high living Standards, modern technology and free democratic institutions. In a few years Unis will he an adult. lJ|)on him the future of his country will rest. Luis will t[e|'eiul, as men do in all free cr)untries, on a newspaper to teach him, keep him informed. Luis' country needs newspapers. Newspafierscan stir Luis, awaken him to the neals ami opportunities which face him and his country. Only to the e.vteml thiit 1 uis ctin emerge from his semi lilerttcy can he participate in tho Iniilding of a fiee ami modern ntition. One htindred and fifty years ago,^when Anieric;i w:is an “emerging ntition," Thomas Jelfersmi put it this way; *Tf a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and nevgr wjll be.” In this struggle to enter “a state of civilization,” repeated today in nations of Asia, Africit and 1 atin America, American citizens have a sttike. For ignorance anywhere, as we see every tlay, thretitens freedom everywhere. 1 his year the American Newsptiper Publishers Association Foundation, an organization founded to encourage freedom of speech and press around the world, has inaugurated the World Press Achiesement Award, Its purpose; to recognize and honor those ncwspiipers in the ileveloping nations of the world which are contributing to the building of informed citizens. These newspapers need encour-i agement. Often they operate with obsolete printing equipment. Their personnel afe ill-trained. They must frequently combat government hostility. Their readers, often wretchedly poor, hick the education to read or understand. Frequently, it is a struggle for these newspapers to exist at all. Yet the newspaper is indispensable in these countries, as it is in free nations everywhere, because nothing substitutes for the newspaper's capacity to educate, to arouse, to challenge, to inform. A new^aper .sets forth tlie face of its age. It interprets the manifold possibilities which lie before Luis, his ntition, or any nation. A free and independent newspaper offers people the freedom to think and to know and thus the capacity to do. The w'orld to stay free needs such ncwsptipers. The 1965 World Press Achievement Award was given last month to the Yeni Adana, of Adana, Turkey. Tha YenI Adana had Its birth as an instrument of resistance against French occupation torces In the Adana area. Since its (oundmg in 1918, it has survived periods of revolutionary political change and has participated actively in “an era of Iruitiul social change. It Is a small provincial newspaper of six pages and 2.500 daily circulation, but it has spoken with a Strong, independent voice. In its early days its founder had to flee for his life to a mountain village where he Continued to publish with rudimentary equipment and clandestine distribution methods. Various governmental, economic and legal sanctions have been taken against it. In 1960 the government closed it. Despite these ccfnditions and a community 75 per cent llliterale, the Yeni Adana has pursued^a bold, independent editorial viewpoint. It has not hesitated to expose wrongdoing by government officials In its local communities. It has sought to acquaint, its urban readers with conditions in ,}he poor and remote villages surrounding them, as well as reporting local, national and foreign news. The Yeni Adana has been a significant factor in the development and education of its community and an inspiration in the struggle lor free expression and'a fuller life. AMERICAN newspaper PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION FOUNDATIOr^ VlSO THIRD AVENUE, NEW YORK. N. Y. 10017 ANPA Nawspapar Intormation Sarvica. April IStS TIIK I’ONTIAC' rilKSS, WFiDNKSDAY, MAY 3, lims TIIIlirY FIVE u»*' & BEST SELLER (Now In 65,227 Family Editions) Th^ Community National Bank Savings Passbook. A story of hopes and dreams. Of planned and unforeseen events. Figures in columns that add up to new homes and busi-y nesses. Educations and vacations. Births and retirements. ■ Figures that grow . . . grow with planned saving and with four percent interest. Grow in complete bank safety. A / story written by 65,227 prudent families in your community. Families saving for the future qt Community Bank. If you don't already have your copy, call on your nearest Community Banker. Let him show you how to make your money go farther and work harder. Your neighbors do. SPECIAL CONVENIENCE FOR PONTIAC MALL SHOPPERS For the added convenience of Pontiac Mall shoppers, the Mall Office of Community National Bank is open Monday through Friday from 11:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. On Saturday, the hours are 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Drive-in banking, safe deposit, and night depository facilities also are available at the Mall Office, Nationat I Bank MEMBER OF THE FEDERALj DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION imn V SIX TIIK I*()N riA( PHKSS. WK.DX KSDA V. MAY D, 15X55 ONE COLOR S . 1:^ A For the Queen in your life... remember Mother May 9th I'or lliiil fi|M>rjiil poi'HOii; for ()ia( H|»o<-ia| Hay, inako Mom frrl likr llic Oiirrii in your life iIiIh MollierH J)ay willi a fiifl ill Kilvrrplale, from Hoho JewrIerH. lint, heller liide lliis papje firwl! A'^oii nee, Momi'h qiiile a gal. She kiious valiieM. Slie’II expert you to he wise enough to rliooi-e her remriuheranr<^ (nun Hose JewrIerH. Silverplated 1-|)i<‘ce Tea Set l-< up 'IVa hcrvice in liiuivy Hilverplale, covered HiiKar Im>wI, f;lillerin{; Hilverplaled ereaiii |>iielier and IS'A” lMM. IDB5 7(1 TALKS Dominican Truce Pact Set Yank Paratroopers Land in Viet Nam SAIGON, South Viet Nam (/P) - An armada of transport planes landed 1,200 U.S. paratroopers in South Viet Nam toddy. They are the first American Army ground combat units sent to fight the Communist Viet Cong. Another 2,300 men of the 173rd Airborne Brigade were expected from Oki- ★ ★ nawa soon, probably this Appeals Court Orders Dr. Sam Back to Jail Majority Decision Reverses July Ruling Releasing Sheppard Pontiac ProH Photo GM PLEDGK — (Jcneral Motors’ Plant City committee has made a pledge of $50,000 to the Pontiac Young Women’s Christian Association’s capital funds campaign. T. F. Welt-horn (left) chairman of the committee and plant manager of the Pontiac Fisher Body Division plant, made the pledge to Mrs. William Emcjrson, president of the local YWCA. week Half of the 1,200 paratroopers were landt^d at the Bien Boa air base 15 miles nortlieast of Sal- House Unit OK See Story, Page A-5 to War Funds YWCA Gets $50,000 Gift The Pontiac Young Women’s Christian Association is $50,000 closer to a new home today. The YWCA fund drive to purchase the former Beaudette home at 269 W. Huron received a $50,000 ______________ _ pledge from the General Motors’ Plant City Committee yesterday. The pledge boosted total contributions and pledges tp date to “well over $100,000,’’ according to Alice D. Serrell, general' chairman of the campaign committee and Mrs. William Emer-Sunshine and showers is the son, YWCA president, forecast for the Pontiac area for the next five days. Rain, Sunshine to lake Turns Temperatures will soar into the 70s until the weekend, then turn a little cooler. Lows for the period will register in the 50s. The pledge, representing one-third of the $150,000 campaign goal, was made by T. F. Weithorn, chairman of the GM Fisher Body Plant. The General Motors gift will * ♦ * add impetus to the campaign Occasional showers or thun- and bring in marty other pledges dershowers, totaling about one and cash contributions from po-inch, .may be expected tonight, tential donors according to cam-tomorrow and Friday. paign committee members. Forty-eight was the low tern- ★ ★ ★ perature in downtown Pontiac The campaign committee con-preceding 8 a.m. By 1 p.m. the Mayor and Mrs. William H. Taylor Jr., honorary^ cochair-men; Mrs. Robert A. Arm-I strong, Mrs. Joseph L. Bennett, Mrs. Myron Buck, Mrs. Charles I Coppersmith, Mrs. Harold A. ^ Fitzgerald, Mrs. Paul Gorman, gon. The rest came in at the Yung Tau airstrip on the South China sea 40 miles southeast of Saigon. U.S. Army forcc%.alrcady in Viet Nam are here ' »s advisers to the South Vietnamese forces and as training personnel. The paratroopers are expected to have the same assigh-ment that the U.S. Marines now have at the Da Nang air base and Phu Bai, 350 miles north of Saigon — defense in depth of the key installation with a liberal sprinkling of offensive operations against the Viet Cong thrown in. Vung Tau may be destined to become a major buildup area for U.S. troopA, similar to Da Nang. As the new arrivals took up position there, Vietnamese air force fighter-bombers were streaking down on suspected Viet Cong positions about five miles away, pouring cannon and rocket fire into the ground. Most of the troopers were too busy to notice, although the cannon shots were clearly audible.: Patrolling from Da Nang, U.S. Marines killed eight Viet Cong, their largest toll so far. One Marine was wounded when he stepped on a booby trap or a mine. WASHINGTON IdV-Thc House Appropriations Committee approved today President John-sin’s request for an emergency $700 million fund to help finance the war in Viet Nam. House leaders promptly scheduled a vote on the money bill as the first order of business after the House convenes at noon. Quick passage was expected. In a brief report explaining its speedy action, the House committee,, said the additional money “will provide the means for continuing the buildup of modern supplies, equipment and facilities for our forces.” It added that the bill will give Congress an opportunity “to make known to our friends and foes alike that the people of the United States have every intention of standing firm in their \) p p o s i t i p n to Communist aggression.” CINCINNATI, Ohio l/P) —The U.S. 6th Circuit Court of AppeaLs today ordered Dr. Sam Sheppard remanded to th() Ohio Penitentiary to resume the life .sentence imposed on him for the 1954 slaying of his wife Marilyn. The appeals court, in a 2-1 decision, reversed a ruling by U.S. Dist. Judge Carl Weinman last July 15 which ordered Shepard’s release from prison on grounds he had not received a fair trial in the Common Pleas Court at Cleveland, Ohio. Judges Clifford O’Sullivan and Harry Phillips signed the majority opinion while Judge George Edwards dissented. ’The majority opinion said it Js, proper for federal courts to see to it that no state shall imprison anyone without due process of law. It said Judge Weinman gave “commendable concern^’ f o r Sheppard’s constitutional rights and then added; “We fear, however, that this admiral zeal led him to go be- Marines Make Bigger Zone for Refugees Rebels Protest U. S. Troops Covering All Embassies in Capital NEW LEADER SALUTES—Col. Francistfh Caamano Deno raises his fist in a salute after being named provisional president of the new Dominican Republic government in Santo Domingo yesterday. He is surrounded by heavily armed guards in the shrlfe-torn city. SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (/P) —■ The Organization of American Slates peace commission hammered together a final truce agreement today after conferring with both sides in the civil war. De.spitc a cease-fire, U.S. Marines continued to enlarge the international zone for refugees. They moved up four blocks to House Cracks Down on Teen-Age Drivers take in the embassies of EV Salvador, Guatemala and Ecuador, ”1116 rebels protested the ' movement of the Marines to the OAS commission, saying they were opposed to taking in all the embassies, some lying within insurgent territory. A U.S. spo'kesman said, however, the cease-fire agreement was between the rebels and the Dominican military junta, that yond permissible limits to find constitutional fault»4rf' The committee noted that the President has authority to obtain the $700 million from funds already available but said, “prudence dictates the enactment of the proposed supplemental appropriation.” ' what was done by the Ohio courts. “The facts in this case do not add up to any of the situations in which the Supreme Court of the United States or any United States Court of Appeals has found it appropriate to strike down a judgment affirmed by the highest court of a state.” reading was 61. I In Today's Press Dream Realized i New Pontiac school ad- | ministration building f ready - PAGE B-8. ’Soviet Ads Russians try Madison Avenue techniques to push goods - PAGE A-15. Coif Porter Up to 100 unpublished songs found in composer’s files - PAGE A-19. Area News .............C-9 Astrology ............C-12 Bddge ... ............C-12 Crossword Puzzle .. C-19 Comics .............. C-12 Editorials ............A-6 Food Section . B-2—B-5 Markets . ............C-10 Obituaries ..........C-11 Sports ...........C-2r-C-5 Theaters ........ . C-18 TV-Radio Proems C-19. Wilson, Earl ... . . C-19 Women’s Pgs, B-13—-B-17 Mrs. Bruce Hubbard, Mrs. James Nye, Harcourt Patterson, Mrs. Gelston V. Poole, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Smith, Irving Stein-man and Charles Harmon, treasurer. PROPERTY OPTION ^ The Y’s option on the property ^ is due to expire June 1st. “General Motors’ generous I pledge will make it possible to \ purchase *he property at the ^ price of $125,000,” said Miss Ser- i The extra $25,000 included in the goal, she explained, is for ' the construction and adequate lighting of an urgently needed parking lot, and addition of a fire escape to the main building* Also needed are alterations to the three-car garage, to convert it to nursery quarters, an -—' age drivers yesterday—after watering down a bill took over after the civilian jun-Monday that would have stiffened penalties for poor “JTe driving. agreement did not prohibit In a busy session yesterday the House also passed movement of U.S. forces, a hill to limit railroad movements when they inter- oAS Commiion‘chairman fere with automobile traffic, and received a business Ricardo M. Colombo of Argen- _________ activities tax bill that tina told reporters the truce could prevent multiple taxation of firms doing -safe conduct for ail politi-business in several states, cal refugees in foreign embassies. *rhe House passed and gave immediate effect to two Senate bills that together bring drivers 17 years or younger under the point system. The two measures, introduced Milton Zaagman, R- 'Secret Medal for U2 Pilot' —Evacuation of all refugees of other nations wishing to leave the .country. ‘ —The distribution of food to all factions. ' The agreement was an-nouncied after a final conference early in the day with the City Commissioners, merchants and other civic leaders will kick off Pontiac’s cleanup ^campaign Saturday with “the big sweep.” The community leaders will gather at 9 a.m. at Huron and Saginaw for a street cleaning session with brooms and De-.-partment of Public Works equipment. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. will lead the sweepers. NEW YORK (AP) - The Central Intelligence Agency in a secret ceremony has awarded a by Sen. medal to Francis Gary Powers, Grand Rapids, would require the the U2 pilot whose crash deep nung of Probate Court findings inside the Soviet Union “shook . . . cpcretarv of State and The Mvance oi the Marines, the world - and caused a good ^tate and five blocks wide as deal of anguish to the CIA,” the would make the teen-agers un- New York Herald Tribune said der Probate Court jurisdiction gome rebel territory in the today. subject to the point system. northern part of the city. This •. ^ * * * * brought a rebel protest. A Washington dispatch noted The bills now go to G o v. ★ ★ ★ that the crash five years ago George Romney for action. Col. Francisco Caamano last Saturday “chilled East- With a weather eye on the Deno, military leader of the West relations and ended any calendar, the House went into revolt, charged that the United meaningful contact between jts second extra-long session in States had violated the demar- President Eisenhower and then two days. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Soviet Premier Khrushchev.” • i 'h Other contributions in amount (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) ‘KEPOBE’—It isn’t Latin w Greek, but short for Keep Pontiac beautiful. Cleanup Committee Chairman Joann Van-Tassel and Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. sit in the presence of Little Eig Chief KEPOBE, Pontiac’s cleanup symbol. Last night the maj^or proclaimed the month of May as “Make and Keefi Pohtiac’Beautiful” month. J I/:; .1-' ■ Taylor n«s proclaimed the month of May as “Make and Keep Pontiac Beautiful” months Copies of the proclamation were presented to Joann Van-Tassel, cleanup committee chairman, and Aleck Capsalis, Civic Improvement Advisory Committee chairman!** The CIAC is coordinating the citywide cleanup drive. Capsalis said it is hoped that cleanup efforts will be a 365-day proposition. Little Big Chief KEPOBE (Keep Pontiac BeautifulL a cardboard caricature, has been selected as Pontiac’s cleanup symbol. The story also noted that the summit meeting in Paris collapsed in the wake of the U2 uproar. Eisenhower said at the Paris conference that photo reconnaissance flights over the Soviet Union had been stopped and would not be resumed. But Khrushchev stormed out of the meeting. The copyright story also said in part; Pick Acting Head for Highway Chief LANSING (AP) - The State Highway Commission yesterday named Acting Director Howard Hill to the $25,000-a-year-post as managing director of the State Highway Department. The f 0 u r,- m a h bipartisan Powers, who ostensibly was a ow. commission announced the ap- U2, receljjd the medal in a cer- emokraS l™ ^ T'”" the CIA’s headquarters in Lan- gley, Va. He actually had been . .. . l W,000m-year pdot lor the conslimUm to re- - place the former systenxiOLju. depjartment headed by an elect-MUST BE SECRET , gj commissioner. John Mackie, Powers, now 35, is not sup- now a U.S. congressman, was posed to wear the medal and is Michigan’s ajnd the nation’s last (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) ' elected highway commissiMier. 'A . k- r The commission was created I- ,; - -t! -I:. "I HOWARD mu. A-2 IK I'UN I IAC I'llKSS. VVKDNKSDAY. MAY. i^, MX teian Television Station .Reveals Red Spy Heroics MOSCOW (UPI) The lelhM' to the Soviet Kovertiiiient new^ piper IT«v(l« nnld. “Thunk you. for Ihe return ot our liuNhnnd Itid fnllier" It woh HlKued, “Mrs. It Abel /nid flmifihler “ The l<‘ller n|)|>ear<*d In I' ehni iry UH12 and prolralrly rnyHillied Soviet readei'H It I'arried no mention ol Mr. It. Al)ei, wlio lie waM, wlwd lie did or why Iiih wife aii(| dau({liler were f^raleliil lor lil.s "sale return " On Moscow television yesler-day, Itiissiuiis learned inihlie ly for the llrst time that It. Abol was Col. liiidolph Abel, a Soviet inasterspy. Television eoimiienfaloi Ser gei Smirnov distlosed tlial Aliel was honored by Hie government alter hi.s exchange in l!Ki2 by a “foreign powcu" for American (12 pilot Kraneis (Jary I’.ower.s Raps Lack of Farmer Storm Aid I.ANSINC (AD Sen linger Johnson, I) Marshall, com plalnetl Tuesday that himdretls of larmer victims of damage lo Ihe t’ahn Sunday tornado are receiving llllle, if any, a.sslsl Jolin.son said that although several emergency programs lor tornado victims have heen announced at Ihe .stale and led eral levels, there is a lack ol coordination ItUDOIdMI Aitr.l. It was revealed that Ahel was reHponsIhle for providing .Soviet inlelligenee with reports on Ihe impending Na/,i attack in ItMl Abel join e d the Communist party in 19.11 after serving in Ihe Uussian secret service from resil'd Abel in Brmiklyn on June 21. I9!i7, and eliarged him with heading a Soviet spy ring whieli for II yeais Iransmilled mill lary and atomic energy secrets lo Moscow 1927 NOT IIKVPAUH) Tlie only thing Soviet viewers jvere not fold yesterday was that the “foreign power" was Ihe United Stales, which ar- 'Secret Medal for U2 Pilot' Abel, (hen 55 and balding, had been operating from a photographers studio in the shadow of the Brooklyn I'ed-eral Courthouse. On Nov. 15, l9tTV, after a trial in which he did not testify, Abel was sen-(eiieed in Ihe same courthouse lo 10 years in prison, ile was defeiuied liy attorney .lames IJonovan of New York, who later was to serve as go-lu'lween In tlu' release of the Cuban Itay ot Pigit prisoners and now heads Ihe New York Scliool Hoard "I talked willi several larm er.s in llilLsdah' (liuniv Hus week and they told me I was tile only per.son wtio lia.s eotiut lo see Hieiii ho tar," John.son said "Tlie.se farmers have lost tliiur means livelihood and (‘xcepi foi' the generosity of sonu' of their nelglilKirs, tliey would lie totally lost." Dairy tariiu'rs have lieen I lorced lo downgrade llieir milk, John,son said, eallle farmers liave heen forced lo .sell surviving portions of Hieir herds and there is a major problem of cleaning debris from fields. All) TO TOWNS "All Hie help so far has lu'en for the people In Hie towns who were liil," Johnson said lie said .some can get help or loari.s from various finleral agencies, “hut most of them ari! in real troidile." MAKINti SPLASH IN SOCIETY-^Il l river sniiiing at them. REBEL BOAT Another rebel l)oat entered the port last night and opened fire on U S. forces on the river l)ank. When the' Americans returned the fire, the trawler blacked out and appc'ared to be adrift, a U.S. military spokesman .said The five-nation OAS mission reported yesterday that the opposing Dominican fucUpns were agret'd on major peace plans. RIVER CRESTS The river crested at Hannibal and Quincy, III., yesterday, held steady for several hours, and then started its slow decline. A 24-hour river watch was still in effect at Warsaw and Niota, III., Pike Cbunty, HI., and other spots along the Illinois side. The Army Corps bf Engineers warned residents of flooded towns not to pump water out of basements too quickly because ground water pressure could collapse the walls. “All the iCvees are holding. We think we’re going to be all right,” a sheriff’s officer said today at Pittsfield, 111. At Handock Ck)unty, a flood worker said, “Things look just fine.” Civil Defen.se Director William Broaddus said at Hannibal that the Mississippi was continuing to recede, with only about 23 families still out of their homes. "Everythng is in good shape,” he said. “Our big problem now is the cleanup.” The committee said it was awaiting formalization of |M)ints accepted by lM)th sides, including “confirmation of the ceasefire, demarcatum and enlargement of the (international) security zone to include all embassies, evacuation of refugees and distribution of food, medicine and medical equipment to all sectors of the population.” Tile mission recommended that the American republics which “are in a position to do so establish a combined inter-American military force under the Organi-zation of American States” lo help restore normalcy. OAS APPROVAL The United States has been trying to get OAjS approval for military contributions by the various repifbUCs lo help restore jH-'acc. In Washington, President Johnson told newsmen it was, “beyond the realm of prediction right now” to guess how long U.S. forces will Stay in the Carribbean island. Johnson ordered U.S, Marines and paratroopfers into the Dominican Republic bust week to protect American residents and property and to block any Communist attempt to take control. A U.S. military spokesman said the United States now has 3,600 Marines and 7,302 airborne troops on Dominican soil. The U.S. Navy has 19 ships offshore with 6,200 men aboard. He estimated that the rebel force totals about 12,000 armed civilians and some 400 former Dominican army personnel. Birmingham Area News Sojourn in Scandinavia Last in Travelogue Series BIRMINGHAM A .Scmidina' vimi Hojourii will be feiitured hi (he seiiHon's luNt travelogue At, the Community lloimo Frida/ and .Saturday. Torts of call for (he visual journey will be in Norway, Sweden and Dt'iimark. To he shown at H both nights, the Him will he narrated by Arthur Dewey. "Scandinavia" not only is an all i'olor film, but it has luu'k-ground mu,sic in slereo|ihonic sound. Viewers will sec Norway with its colorful Laplanders and salmon fishing, fjords at apple blossom lliiie, Norwegian han- dicrafts and the siiCclnculnr inldnlglit sun. JOTHISR (ICICNEjl Dewey (ihotographed the gardens of Gothenlwrg, Sweden; Vlsby, the city of ruins and roses; Swisllsh Industry; and Swedish leen-agerH at a dance. The Denmark iHirthiu of (hr fHiii Includes shots of (Iqieii-hageii, (he Royal Ballet and Ihe making of Danish pastry. A |)refilm .SmorgaslKtrd will he s<*rved from 6 p.m. Ixdh nlglits. DiniWr reservations are required by mmorrow, but tickets for the film can be purchased at the door. Klan Attorney Calls Spy'Liar' ((Continued From Page One) Thomas s|K>ke up and said, ‘Let’s get ‘cm’," SOMETHING INTERVENED Tliey tried .several times to pull akmg.side Mrs. Liuzzo’s car, ilowe went on, but each lime .something intervened. Once (hey spotted a highway patrol car. Another time it was a crowd of Negroes standing near the highway. Later, it was oncoming traf- fic. The witne.ss said he tried several times to get liis companions to turn back to Selma l)ut that Thomas insisted, “We’re going to take 'em; We’re not going lo give up.” Wlien the time came, Rowe Continued, “Gene Tiiomas got out his pistol and handed it to Wilkins. As we got directly dven with the car, Wilkins said, ‘Give it some gas’. We speeded up a little bit. LOOKED AT US’ “Wilkins held his arm out the window, elbow length. Just as he got eve nwith the front window of the other car, the lady turned and looked directly at us. As she looked, Wilkins fired two shots. “Thomas said, “Men, shoot the hell out of them’.” “Water — Wasted Wealth” is (he title of tonight's Birmingham - BltMimfield 1-eague of Women Voters program at Hie Baldwin Public Library. William D. Marks of (he Michigan Water Resources Commissiop will be (he featured speaker at the 8 p.m. event. Marks will give on illustrated talk on “Michigan’s Water Problems” Also on'the program will be a film shown by the league, which will provide a display and publications on the subject. The program is open to the public. BU)OMFlELD TOWNSHIP The annual dinner meeting of the Oakland Citizens League will be held May 18 at Devon Gables restaurant. Long Lake and Telegraph. Guest speaker at the 6 p.m. program will be Lawrence M. Carino, 1176 Covington, vice president of the .Slorer Broadcasting Co. and general manager of WJBK-TV. The 500 member league is a non-partisan, non-profit organization. Its purpose is lo establish and promote better under,r standing of civic issues. ' «. Ticket information can be obtained by contacting the Birmingham Community lHou.se. Denies Remark Aimed at JFK Rowe said he al.so had a pistol but did not fire it. As they pulled ahead, Rowe said he noticed Mrs. Liuzzo’s car still traveling in a straight line and told his colleagues it seemed the shots may have missed. But, he added, “Wilkins spoke up and said, ‘Baby brother, I don’t miss. That so-and-so is ddader than hell’.” After returning to Bessemer later in the night, Rdwe said they went to a place knbwn as Lorene’s and, after talking with a woman inside, Thomas assured the other men, “I’ve got us an alibi.” Officers Elected by library Group NATIONAL, WEATHER-Scatterech showers and thunder-^iranttlHre forecast tonight from the southern Plains through the (Qrtmt Lakes and into the Appalachians. Showers are ex-'peCted from the Rockies to the Dakotas, It will be cooler Rom the,(BOOtbem Plains and Great Basin to the upper Mis- , sOuri Valley end warmer in the upper Lakes and mid-Mis---iNppi Vtiky. -t <1 Elected president at last night’s meeting of the Friends of the Kresge Library of Oakland Univet;sity was Leonard T. Lewis of 1450 Pilgrim, Bloomfield Township. Other officers selected were ■James L. Howlett, of 104 E. Iroquois, vice president; and Mrs. W. Edwin Mosher Jr., of 279 N. Glengarry, Bloomfield Township, secretary-treasurer. Outgoing president was Carl F. Ingraham of 940 Harmon, Birmingham. ^ ^ 1 1 H * 1 Student on Trail of 'Talking' Guinea Pigs ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) Johnny Scoville is certain his guinea pigs are talking to each other. by the mother when she calls her young to nurse. He is determined to convince the judges of this at the National Science Fair here this week. Scoville, 17, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Scoville of Evarts, Ky., is a high school senior. After 18 months of experiments he says he has isolated 11 different Words — or sounds — his guinea pigs make to each other. The youth is one of more than 400 students from the United States and several other countries competing in the science fair. All are winners of state, regional or national fairs. MANY HOURS Scoville has spent hundreds of hours listening to the sounds of his guinea pigs. He also has experimented with" bees and dogs. He says he believes most animals communicate with each other. , His tape recordings demonstrate different guinea pig sounds for hunger, mating, anger, contentment;; and even thanks. “They have two kinds of ‘thank you’ sounds,” Scoville said. “One is thanks for food and the other is thanks for attention — life being petted.” OTHER CALLS : Other sounds include one made by the mother guinea pig just before birth, and one made “The important thing is that all these sounds come before the action,” he said. “For instance, I know when they are going to fight, because they argue with each other.” The fighting sound is guttural, accompanied by gnashing of teeth. The anger sound is not quite so guttural, and is not accompanied by gnashing. The hungry sound is squeaky. Scoville further illustrates his theory through use of an oscilloscope which displays the dif- ferent guinea pig sounds in light waves. When Scoville plays the mating call on his tape, there is pandemonium in the guinea pig cages. When he plays the mother’s call, the young hurry to the mother. ,•1 EAN he TALK?—Johnny Scoville, 17, of Evarts, Ky.; shows one of his guinea pigs to Japanese students who are also competing in n the International Scidnee Fair at St. Louis. Scoville says research shows that guinea pigs . ^'4 ' u Jir AP PhOlofM talk to each othW through a system , of sounds. He has figured out what 11 of their sounds mean and is worJdng on , several others'. ^ ...,t , Johnson Reference to Rocking Choir Cited NEW YORK 144 - George E. Reedy, White House press secretary, has denied a charge that President Johnson’s disavowal of a “rocking chair” approach to Communist aggression implied criticism of the late President John F. Kennedy. Kennedy, who suffered from a back ailment, often was photographed in a rocking chair. Johnson also likes a rocking chair and invariably rocks and talks while visitors sit on a sofa. Rep. Gerald R. Ford, R- Mich., the House minority leader, in New^York fqr a fund-raising dinner yesterday, said a statement by Johnson was an implied criticism of the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion by Cuban exiles. The invasion was an attempt to unseat Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro early in the Kennedy administration. In an address to a labor conference in Washington Monday, Johnson had said: “We don’t propose to sit herd in our rocking chair with our hands folded and let the Communists set up any government in the Western Hemisphere.” UNDERSTAND INNUENDO Ford told newsmen: “We all understand the innuendo of that statement. It implied criticism of our failure at the Bay of Pigs, which ail* of us know wsis arfailure.” “Of course not,” was Reedy’s reply in Washington when he was asked if the rocking chair remarks implied criticism of Kennedy or the failure of the invasion. Ford said he supported the Johnson administration’s actions in Viet Nam and the Dominican Republic. COULD DEVELOP He added, however, t h a t unless the export of communism by Castro is halted and the government of the Domiilitran Republic is stabilized, Gqmmunist uprisings could develop^ in possi4 bly in thrhe other Latin Amei[i-can countries in the next months^, ,'t A- PON'I'lAC l*HK-SS. W.KnNKSDAV, MAY ft, MMift Our Nation's Elderly—3 Millons Still Live on Poverty’s Brink (EDITOR'S NOTE - Other fidvauced nktif>u» started Con cerninu, theintelvea utith the ptifiht »/ their imfxiverinhed old i>eoi>Ui Umfi helore the United States did. Today, tnore than H million Amerkan lamllieH are headed by a ;xrr sen over (15 tryiny to make do on incomes below the {xivarty level (Umyress is rushiny to then aid.) Ity IIAKIIY FKKCiUSON WASHINGTON (UI*l)-Thcrt‘ arc a( least nine federal agencies working to improve the hit of old iieople. The Social Security Administration semis checks to almost 20 million persons. So what’s the crisis? Why has I’resideiit Juluison p r o-elulined May as “Senior Cltl-7.ens Month” mid why Is he pushing so hard to get C'onr gross to puss a bill providing Medicare under Social Security? The answer Is that, despite ail the efforts of the federal government and the welfare programs of states and cities, millions of old persons still are living on the brink of isiverly The United States got a late start in taking care of its old folks compared to other nations living in a condition of advanced civilization. A problem so lotig lajSgc neglected balloons up so laigc that it cannot be solved over- night. KAMILY OK TWO The quickest way to gel at the heart of the problem is to take the case of a family of two. The man is about to retire and he and his wife attended a class for elderly persons conductiul by Prof. Woodrow Hunter of I h e University of Michigan in behalf of the United Auto Workers. The purpose of the class is to teach ol^ people how to adjust to their new living conditions. monlli), $iiil; housing, $hu; clollv lug, |2V; medical jMid hoallh, $I2T auto and lrans|Kirtntluii, 14.1; personal, $17; nuacallon, $;tl; taxes. $;I4; other, $'20. There was no provision for savings The man earned $:il4 a month and Ihi^y budgeted all of I'OVi '.HTY llANtiK The federal govtntimenf calculates that a family is in pover-i ty if it has an income of under a year This family is going to have to get along on $2,-a year wlien the liusband rvdires, becau.se their i n c o m e will be cut by one-third. The cold facts pr«>duecd by i'roHident .loluison’s Council on Aging give this grim picture : • iTiere are :i.2 million families headed hy a person over with incomes below |:i,(K)0 an nually. visions of the legislation has oh-scureil the la<‘l that what Is under con.siilcration actually Is a broad revision of the .Social Security laws. What I’reHidonI; .lohiiHon really Is proposing Is almost something for cverylssly Like this: • MaKimum monthly HiK'lal security henefils lor if iMUson j would rise fi(.m $127'loiKlf) IKI Monthly luaximums lor a lam ily would go up from $214 lo $312 and after MI71 lo $;i(i|l • There arc 1.5 million Amer-i leans -not living with families or relatives who have incomes un- j der $20 a week | CimONIC ILI.NESS j • Four out of every five (K‘r-| sons over 115 suffer in some degree from a form of chronic illness and the doctor's fee of $10 during World War II is now approaching $20, • Each year one out of every(ilif older persons goes to a hospital. Each average elderly couple pays close to $6(MI a year in hospital bills. Opponents of the medicare bill now being debated in Congress state that pre.seht laws already provide adc(iuate medical care for the aged. • Children of deceii.scd, re tired or di.sal)led pamils would draw benefits uidil age 22 in stead of III if they were lull lime students. • .Self em|)loyed doctors atui interna Would be brought under social security. • Social security recipienis could earn up lo 2,4(KI a year by wbrklng and still receive Ihtdr benefits. Tlu' present e(*ll Ing ls$l.2(K) a year. • Federal funds for crippled and retarded children would be increased. • Widows could draw benefits at age till instead ol wailing until 62.' The couple submitted tliis budget under which they are now operating: food ( p e r 'Their contention is lliat people simply are not lakipg advantage of the provisions be-cau.se of llieir own inertia or because the .slates are lagging behind the federal government in utilizing the money available. CONTROVERSY The counlroversy that swirls around thd medical care p Forgetful Old Flier Survives Plane Crash Worth , AMAHlULO, 'Te W Warner of Fort walked away unhurt afICr his single etiginc plane crash l.ind ed at the end of a runway at , Tradewind Airport 'Tuesd.iy Warner, a flier since lillll, said he forgot lo lower the landing gear. He estimated damage ! lo his plane at $l,l>06. Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With LIHIe Worry Rkt, t.Hlk, liuiKli or Hiiuo/.n wHIiiiui «ujjmis"p ti>rtnbly.Tlil»pU)«*ant powdiirhiiH no Oaklainl ('.oiiiily'.s l.ar^cNl liiHliliili. . is.,i. ItOAUI) (H l>llti:4 lOitS 701 wi:sr iii Kors si KKi I (» I'A l.tiwrt'iicc Slrct'l 107 MiiiiiSiio I IIOOixi.-lliKhwuv Oi'nylon niiinn I I02W. Mi.ph- Uoiid Walled laike N. M.iiiiSir.-. i MilToi.l litlltl Orionvill.‘ Ron.I Cliirknloii I South ItroiHlH.r l ake Orion Ch.rk J. M.ihl.o. ltrusoi., .|r. Coiini.l N. < hill, h .laiiii-H CliirkHoii R. < 4iirr < liiniiiiiiiKN It. I..M I . lla.iiliii JolinO Wiiil.I. II VITOUNI.A < . Itr^i.ii Kiiiii. . Al 1)1 lOUS ikiiiH nml EnIimi Koory, pnaty tii (non-Bold). OherkR Irug nountcr# evorywlnn Thomas'Furniture's Redwood Groupings ore the ultimate in luxury, quality and construction! .K CALIFORNIA REDWOOD 3 FINE GROUPS VALUE PRICED AT ONLY JUST $10 DOWN ^COMPARE THESE BETTER-QUALITY FEATURES 72” Picnic Table with 2 Benches, Club Chair, Chaise with Vinyl Cushion, 18" End Bench ..... $98 Chase Lounge ■with Vinyl Cushion, Club-Choir; Rocker ond 28" Round' ockt il Table........ S $98 • The finest 2" oil-clear old growth California redwood. • All frames cir.e precision mortised, tenoned and glued. • Carefully constructed and finished by skilled craftsmen, f All cushioned pieces feature redwood slot backs. i. Reversible vinyl povered foam cushions are easy to clean and ore supported by strong helical-tied alurpinum strapping. • All Hardvvare Is plated For maximum resistance to weather. _ omple free parking • cgnYenient credit 'love Sept,’Co.ci|tail Table, Rocker and Club Chair .................... 5>9o PONTIAC 357 S. SAGINAW• FE 3-7901 OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY ’TIL 9 . ; ■ ,.J ' i. ■ DRAYTON 4945 BIXIE HWY^ iDR 4-0321 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 'TIL 9 r?i' %. i'’ TIIK, r()NTlAC rilK.SS, WKDNFiSDAY. MAY fi, HHW Hou^e OKs Birth Control Bills LANSING (AP) - A pair of onee-conlroversial birth control bills br««««d tbixMiijh llic Ibrtise! . Tiicwlay. Sent to the Hcnntc were bills N|)oi)Hore(] by Hep. William Hynn, IMH^trolt, which estab-HhIi a alate ia)llcy on birth control, clinIcH and assistance to re<‘lplcnts of welfare and aid to de[MmdeiU children and the mtHlically IndlKent. The bills, passed 112 1 It and !MI S. w«TC the result of aKrceniefits worked out betwe«‘n Hyan and Hep." It. James Starr, l)-Lan sing, a former a(K‘ial worker. The ainendmenis provide for verbal notification of all wel fare recipients, including unwed mothers. The amendments (julelisl coniroversy and drew praise and suppia t from former opisments, Including legislators and at least one planned parent IichkI group. t The hills, if appfovetl by the Senate and signetl Into law by (iov. George lloinney, would replace policies adoptjsl by the stale Social Welfare Commission and the Detroit Welfare Hoard earlier Ibis year aiul the Kent coujiily welfare agency last SeplemlM-r. 'Hie commission’s Detroit |M)-licies permit case workers visit-‘Plf^be homes of recipients Visit Initiate discussion and extend such Information to unmarried women 'file Kbnt ctainty |M>llcy pro hibits both. Hotb (piestions have been at (ASvtrllwHnMiU MUSCULAR ACHES-PAINS T«h* PRUVO taltlati whan yiu want tampprary rpliaf from minor achat and palm and body tilifnatt oftan attoclalad with Arthrltli, RhaumatUm, Buralllt, Lumbafo, Bachacha and Painful Mutcular achat. Lota thata dltcomfortt or your monay bach. SIMMS BROS. D«pt. Sloit 9S N. Saginaw Drug Dapt. the heart of all disagreement over a state policy. Both were prohibited in the liills as first drafted by Ityan. (AOvarllumann SINUS Sufferers ItiitalMd bymtSt). Tiyillodiyl -98 N. Saginaw Here Are The Winners of SIMMS and MAC-O-LAC Paint Co. Contest Prizes! 1tt.P0IITABI.eTVSET MR. THOMAS BESSENT 17) Crstiwodd, Pontiac Ird ‘QE CLOCK RADIO R. M. BLAYLOCK 59 Traggnt, Pontiac Bth ELECTRIC CAN OPENER HIGGINS DICKSON 396 Midway, Pontiac Mr. L. Zolk, Siipmt 2nd Floor Monogar Praianti Mt BattariF Hit porlobla TV tal. All winnart litlad on thit odv. plaoia coma lo Simmi point dapl. lor your priiai 7th QAL. MAO-O^LAO ENAMEL ART ELDRED 2695 Lakatlda, Highland 9th. QAL. MAQ-O-LAC LATEX E. W. CALLAHAN 3437 Aoborn, Pontiac 2nd. BUOK 'II DECKER DRILL MR. IRVIN BOYNTON 8610 Buffalow Dr., Union Loko 4th. ‘QE’ ELECTRIC tOASTER MARY MOERY 3216 Rycroft, Koogo Harbor 6th. PORTABLE ELECTRIC MIXER ^ MARGARET DOOLY 3B' Chapman,' Pontiac 8th. QAL. FORMULA 99 PAINT WILLIAM HARDING 4365 Midland, Drayton 10th QAL. MAC-O-LAC HOUSE GEORGE DIETZ 3940 Covort Rd., Ponfioc Big 3-Day Sale-Fabulous Buys for Thurs -Fri.-Sat.-Gifts For Mom and Yourself ChBCk these spe^l items for gift ideas for Mother's Day and for things you need everyday. For 31 years Simms has given you quality Mother s Day gifts at low prices. Everyday items also at special savings this weekend. We reserve the right to limit quantities. Prices su^eot to atook __ ^ ^, i... 1111 j.j... i l.i.i.m.i i Value to 69*^ Cotton Fabrics Yardgoods St|N Prints solids, polterns, designs all in 100% cotton. 1 lo 10 yard Close-out of Girls Shoes jOO $3.95 Many alyins In oxfords ond ifropt by EndlcoirJohnaon to choosa from. Sizes 8'/ilo 2. Basement Bed nilews 67 Simms Price 17x22’* Non-Allergenic, shredded foam rubber in colorful floral Summer Short Sleeve Boys’ Psuamas jOO Simms Price short sleeve pullover stylo with eluslic walslbbnd pants. Sizes 4 lo 10. Short or long logs lOOYo Cotton Boys' Sport Shirts American Made 79 en’s Knit Shirts with ‘Aefion Sleeves’ ^ First Quality |00 Be prepared for summer weather with these knit sport shirts with action stretch underarms ribbed collar efnd cuffs and breastpocket. Mostly white. Sizes S-M-L. —Basement Mens Short Sleeve Sport Shirt Simms 0 Price Firtt quolily 100% cotton shirts in prints, solids. Sizes S-ML. — Basment Full or Twin Sizes Bedspreads Values I $14.95 I 186 Mother^s Day anti Graduation Gift 20% Discount Off All ‘sTimex’ Watches $11.85*^^x Watch . 8.88 S16.H Timex Self-Wind . 12.T6 $12.88 Timex Watch . 10.36 $18.88 Timex OeH-Wind . 13.88 $14.98 Timex Watch . 11.88 $18.98 Ladles 21 Jewel.. 18.96 $18.00 Timex Welch . 12.80 $a4.»» Man's 21 Jewell .19.98 $38.88 Timex lleolrlo Watch................... $31.96 Fully guaranteed 'Timex' watches in newest styles for men, women and the youngsters. Perfect gifts or for your personal use. All prices plus 10% Fed. Tax. —Main Floor Kodak ('amehiH Make Perfect Gifts 8mm SAVER Movie Camera With Roll of Color Film General Electric Gift Clocks Two stylos to choose fromi GE 'Clearlux beautiful clear plastic mantel style, or GE 'Provincial' with truilwood finish. Plus 10% Fed. Tax. —Main Floor Ladies Leather Clutch Purse 095 Simms M ^ ^ Price ^ Leather clutch purse has roomy bill compartment, 2 coin purses. In red gold black or white.. 10% fed. tax. - Main Floor ^Udies Gift Bilffolds 32 Picture Windows cowhide. In red, gold Plus Ingraham Folding Style Travel Alarm 069 $5.95 Jm Value Famous Ingraham brand -travel clock !n a folding case. In white, red or grey. Factory guarantee, 10% fed. fax. —Main Floor Westclox Folding Style Travel Clock C95 $7.98 aa''*' Value Attractive hi-impget plastic case with sliding front. Luminous dial. 10%Fed.Tox. —Main Floor 100% Acetate-Fancy Lace Trims Ladies K Gowns You'll be fill ready to take beautiful movies on Mother's Day with this Kodak camera and color film. F2.7 coated lens with rapid wind crank dial sellings for perfect exftosures. — Main Floor Kodak Instamatic 100 Set Heg. $17.95 Value 1298 So easy to use with Instant pack loading, built-in flash keep it handy for those irresistable pictures of the children —Main Floor Perfect Gift For Mothers Day ‘Oominion’ Electric Knife As shown —- has the woiglit up front for bettor carving of roasts, poultry hams, cake, fruit cheeso etc. Stainless steel blades. Fro© replacement guarantee. —2nd Floor I7« Dormeyer Electric Portable Mixer 7” Gift Price S-speed porlablo hand mixsr tor ony kitchen mixing thor«. With cord.—2nd Floor Automatic 4-10 Cup Coffee Makert Cift Price ||99 'Univorsnl' dulomalic pnrcolalor lor perfect coffee and keeps If serving warm at the table. —2nd Floor White or Colors Kleenex Tissues 1C 39c Value 29 300 double or 600 single sheets of soft but strong Kleenex. —Main Floor Twin Pack 2-Tubes Teeth Paste 43 $1.06 Value^ Your choice of lodent Kolynos or Llsterine toothpaste In twin-pack. —Main Floor Pack of 12 Famous Sanitary Napkins 29'^ Reg. 45c Your choice of Kotex, Ferns, Slenderlino or Miss Deb. t°r feminine hygiene. —Main Floor Concentrated Tube Prell Shampoo 89' $1.39 QDC Famify WW ■■ ^ Size Genuine Prell shampoo for lustrous hair, in' a tube, handy for trcJvel. —Main Floor 2-Types ef ‘Lustre Cream’ Hair Sprays $1.25 value, 1 SVk ounce Lustre Creme for regular or hard to hold hatr. Brushes out, is not sticky. —Main Floor Automatic Electric Can Opener Gt0 ^99 Opens any size and shape can . . . fast, effitient electric opener makes an Ideal gift for Mother. Guaranteed 'Regent'. -2nd Floor 12" Stainless Steel Chicken Fryer 488 $12.95 Value Easy to core for stainless fry pan with hl-domo cover tor largest chickens. —2nd Floor ^REVERE Copper Clad Tea Kettle 5.75 067 Valued Sloinless with copper-clad bottom tor fast even heex. Trigger action spout. #2701. —2nd Floor | Gift For Mother or Your Own Use ‘Presto’ Pressure Cooker 6-Quart—$19,98 Value Large 6-quart pressure cooker for better, faster cooking of all foods. Exclusive pressure regulator. Cast'oluminum cooker | by'Presfo'. — 2nd Floor 1 TIIH rONTIAC l‘imss. WKDNmjllAV, MAY (V. limit 2 Hospitalized in Bus Crash HOr^LAND (AP)—Two youths wore hospitalized and 40 others siifferwl minor Injuries wlien tiielr seh(U)l hus collldttd wllli iUi oiK;omli){{ our and |)luiii;ed into II lfi-f(H»t^leep culverl Tuesday. The bus was carrylnij mem. hers of tlie West (Hlawn IIIkIi MCluxil track team to a meet at Crnnd Haplds lllf?li ScIuk)I, Tlie brakes of the vehicle failed ns the bus came down an exit ramp of U.S. ;il a half mile from Holland, Ottawa (\>unty Sheriff’s officers said. Daniel Arizmandcz, III, of Holland was reported in fair con-illtloh in Holhuul Hospital with a concussion. Anotlatr Holland youth, Forrest Hamilton, was .listed in k (uir, Konnie Jones, 20, of Holland was not iiijunHl. Successful Marine Raid Kills 8 Cong Kngllih l« Mch • «ra«)M|ullt language that It apfUa ita 40odd basic stMinds of voweli Mid oon-Bonants In some 2,000 different DA NANO, Viet Nam (fll U.S. Marine ihfantry squads played a deadly cat and mouse guine with Communist guerrlb las yesterday and killed eight in their most suctessful operation of the war. Two leathertuu’ks were wounded In the action near lilnli Thai village, eight miles sany of the 2nd Hattallon, lird Marine Iteglment. About 400 Marines were in the field. 'I'hey came upon the Viet (,’ong unex|M!ctedly after one company was helicoptered In to join oUi-ers which had remained out overnight. AFTER MANi?UVERING After maneuvering several liours, the Marines applle^l a hammer and anvil lactic, as-saidtlng the Viet Cong targets and throwing In rockets a n d heavy machine gun fire. When Canine Accomplice Aids 2 Boys in Theft (illANI) KAIMDS (UI’I) I'o-lice are looking for two young thieves and the opposite of a |)ollce dog. Clyde Chalicnder, a (Jerk in an ap|)llance store, repiu'ted to police tliut two boys stole a portable phonograph and when he tried to stop them, their big Gerirwn Shepherd dog wouldn’t let him come near them as jhey fled. the smoke cleared, eight Viet Cong were dead. The Marines figure that probably 20 got away. Tlie bodies were flown to Da Nang "not for s|>e,clacle hut to bury them pro|)erly and to get Intelligence," a Marine officer said. Several wtmnded Viet C o n g were found |n Ia', My village by a patrol from the 2nd Marine Hattallon. They had laum hit In a fight near the same village yeslerday. Three Marines weri' woundtHi, two by bullets and one by a mhie. 900 INFANTRYMEN Nearly (MM) Mailne infantry-nu-n were In action "We will have to stay out there much hmger to really clean that place out,” said Capt. Peter Yadlowsky of Jersey City, N.J. •MJtyfne tracked vehicles car- rying six IINinnn recolUess cannon and four SO-cidIber macldne guns were out for tin) first lime in combat. Five of them moved in a column with six Marine medium tanks as a l>|, l!H IIAItOU) A rlT/.(lt;itAU> Builnut U(nii«r H»«V J, flKM Menial llealili Ideal Rales Nation’s Salute Tliroii|--,h(Mil • lh(' Uiillcil Htulc.s NaMoiiiil Menial llealili Week Is be lug observed Various (‘voiils are .slated to liiklrlibbt the eaic and treatmeni of those sol lei inn l"»iltal where she <#88 admitted after be coming III while visiting In the home of the deputy commuiul-liig general (»f the United Stales First Army, Tile hoNpital did tjol announce the niitufe of the lllnesH of the 43-yenr-ol(l actress. Siie wi|S rustled to the h(Hi|>ltal Monday from the home of 'MaJ.. (ion. J. F. ft. Seitz,'at (iovernor's iHland. Mrs. Seitz, a dose friend of Miss Allyson, is actress Jessie lloy(>e Landis. Miss Allyson was stricken with a kidney InhH'llon (oirller this year and was hospitalized several days. Graham Leaves for Crusade in Denmark Fvuiigellst Billy Uralmni says he hopes his eight-day crusade la Uo|M;nhagen “might be the heglnning of a spiritual awakening in Denmark and Ihrniighniit Scandinavia.” Before leaving New York last night for the crusade, (Irnhnm said he hoped that, us a result of his evangellsin, the nonchurchgoers of Si'undinavia w of Michigan'! Original ()|icounlar< APPLIANCE BUYERS ATTENtlONr^ MY NEW SOUTHGATE STORE OPENS TODAY! TO CELEBRATE I'VE CUT EVERY PRICE IN EVERY STORE -MANY PRICES CUT AS MUCH AS *25-HURRYi IN TODAY AND REALLY SAVE MONEY! Whoopoe!!! My now ^owfhgoto store opens today and am I celebrating . . This is it, my biggest sale of the entire year . . I'rfe cut every price and every one ol my 8 great stores have joined in to help make it Ihe most successful sales event of the year. Now is the time to buy, no matter what type of appliance, TV or Stereo you want, I've got it qnd the price hds been cut over and above my lov/J low levels . . . This is e you can't afford to miss. Hurry by today. 21" RCA COMBINATION 169.00 14-Lb. Automatic Washer Hoi Point Upright Frapiar COLOR TV 249"" Oiinith Walnut Xipio Finish —1 —: ''I',’,:';;: 159"" SdteOnl. 14900 lirrbKH’K (iEHMANS (ibESTION JKW.S Hcrlin po lice officials arc shown in llll'l as Ihcy (picslioncd local .lews* before hauling them lo jail lor fmllier inferrogidion. Si*enes like Ibis were lamlliar in (iermany during Ihc lirsi days of Ihe Nazi boycoll againsl Ihe .lews. * Germany in Turmoil—2 Victories Encouraged Hitler jj V IKDITOHH NOTF. From ihc moment tie took jmwer in ttfXt. Aihlf Hitler xtarteil tier moHji on the road of eonqueHt. The fqllowiuq seeond oj jour artielek on Hitlerite Cermany. tells oj d<;r fuehrer's assumption of dietqtorial power ) Ky l.OYAb (fOllLI) KKIU.IN*(AI’) V Shorlly all er he gained jMiwer in l‘j:i:i, Adolf Hitler and his fellow Nazis began looking for an ekeuse that would give (lietn an iirjfeUered hand in shaping Ihe destinies of (iermany and evenlually Ihe world. "Today (iermany belongs lo us.” (hey u.sed lo .say. ' Tomorrow the world.” They found their chance for complete power over Germany in less than a month. On Feb. 27, Ihe Parliatnenl building in Berlin, the Keichstag, burned down Historians still arguT* whetjier Communists or some of Hitler’s close followers planned the, blaze. Hitler blamrxf il on the Beds and demanded absolute power to fight social Unrest. LAW PASSED Parliament passed a law giving all its powers to Hitler personally. With no more parliantentary restraints, Ihe Nazis announced a national boycott of Jewish .shops, excluded Jews from pub-,lic office, journalism, farming and tfi'e theater. aside, Hiller lurned his allcn-tion lo foreign relations. Since Ihe Kcich was dljilo-matically i.solaled and mihtaril ly weak, he made a series of "pece s|)eeches” insisting lhal he would never n'sorl to force lo achi(>v(> his forein policy goals Kill foul' months later, he announced lhal Cermany was withdrawing from Ihe international disarmament conference and from the beagiie of Nations. SECIIET OllDEHS Hitler gave secret orders to start rebuilding Ihe Cerman armed forces He calletl off the Versailles reparations payments lo creale the first of many international crises. Othdrs followed over a Ihree-year period until Cermany occupied the demilitarized left bank of the Rhine in in.'lfi. Hut while he was professing a desire for peace, 'nUler sent tanks, planes and men to be tested in the services of Gen. Franci.sco Franco, the Spanish Fa.scist who revolted against the Republican government in Madrid. A Cerman air force unit, Ihe Condor Legion, desiroyerl the Spanish town of Guernica with blitzkrieg bombing tactics that later wdre used on Warsaw, Poland ; Rotteixf;;im, the Nelher-lans, and Coventry, England In thal same year, 19116, Hitler signed the so-callwl Axis pact with Benito Mussolini, aligning Germany and Italy, tmd the anti-Comintern pact aligning Germany with Japan. 1996 OLYMPICS Shortly after the 1996 Olympics, Hitler ordered secretly organized Nazis in the country of his birth; Austria, to start a series of bombings and violent demonstrations to weaken the government of Chancellor Kurt von Schuschnigg. By 1996, the groundwork had been so welj-preparod that the German army marched into Austria without firing a shot and without fear of foreign countermeasures. and order 'Ihc Wcsicrn Allies ] failed lo <’omc lo Ihc aid of llie i •ouniry Ihcy had formed on Ihc j basis of Presidenl Wocslrow Wil ’ Ts M i)oinls after World War' Hiller's bol test for focusing vision artd eye teamwork, and prescribe ajid^fit glasses. , . *■— -ih-v- in 'iiV Dr. Erwin Clahassey, chairman of the opthalmology sge- tion of the Michigan State Medical Society, showed the committee a series of large pictures of diseased eyes, each under a heading that asked, “if this were your eye, would you risk a nonmedical diagnosis?” Dr. Harold Falls, professor of opthalmology at the University of Michigan, said that “should this iegislative body see fit to grant optometery thesevrequest-ed amendments, injurious and dangerous consequences to the ocular health of the people of thjs state would result.” . He said such a bill would set up two standards of eye care. Df. Robert Britton, president bf the Michigan Optometric As-li stud “we^an jujstify t°ff ition, -Jj everything we’ve asked for by ; education and experience.” He said there has been no abuse in. six states with laws similar to that proposed. Britton told the committee that optometrists cannot perform a complete eye examination without the use of drugs in some cases. Dr. Gordon Heath of Ifldiana University declared tha| ° optometric training has increased frbm an apprentice program at the turn of the century to a. fiVe-year minimum course] currently is being increased to | six years.. . ; Heath arid Britton both said the courses include pathology and pharmacology, relating to the diagnosis and use of drugs. The committee is expected to,, act on the bill next week. . Gift Suggestion esqi ■“WfiTKIfE'/WPlliSSB 4, Healy SUnn^ Scratch Resistant SERV-A-TRAY HOSTESS CART With Removable Serving Tray • Genuine Walnut Wood Trim • Walnut Wood Finish Troy and Shelf • Gleaming Brass Plated Accents A help to the hostess. Rolls on 3" casters, may be used os TV or stereo table, utility cart, serving tray or portable bar. Will give years of service! ^ DOyVNTOWN PONTIAC ROCHESTER PLAZA BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE WtILE PONTIAC MALL SHOP WITHOUT CASH -"CHARCtlT" AT KRESGE’S INK l*()N'l’IA(' KHKSS, W Kl )N KSI )A V, MAV />, I1M;5 'World Conquest Russian Space Aim WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ue* spita U.S. outlays of $7 billion a yaar, llussln still lomls this unuilry in the s|)oce race, ami according to space director James bl Webl», Hussia'a aim spiice is world iloinlnalioii No Trip Abroad for U.S. Cadets Wclib sold llie Unllcd Slfdon has |)ro|Mmc(l cootnuallve spaci' ventures, but the llusslans "In tills held as ill ninny olliei's , . have peeii eonipH Hors ami liavi' been lieelUiig some means to gain powei over us and Hie Defense Dept. Cites Balance of Payments WASHINGTON (Al‘) • About 2,IHMI cadets and inldsliipmen ol Uic Uirm* major armed service ncadcinies will bave |o do wilb out the broadening Influence of foreign travel IIiIh year and next, The Oefense DepaiTmeiil dls cbmed tiKlay Ibal Hummer train ing duly abroad lias been called off for WesI roini and Air l'’orce Academy cadelH and for An naiiolls midshipmen The reason "a continuing imlavorable international bal ane<‘ of payments." In Ollier word.s, the future off! cers would .spend dollars in for elgii eouniries and lliiis would aggravate flu; outflow of U.S. gold. UKSTIlI(’Ti:i) THAINING Affectwl are about 1,7(KI Naval Academy 1st and Jrd (lassmcn, some (i0() We.st UoinI 1st and 2nd classmen and about rdK) 2nd classmen at lb«» Air l'’orce Academy. ‘‘The midshijirnen summei training crui.ses will be restricted to operational training and' visits to U.S. ports,” the Navy said. (Canceled were s|)ecial mid shipmen cruises to the Mediterranean, the Western I’acific, the arctic area and two cruises willi antisubmarine warfare Imnler-killer groups in the Atlantic. TTie midshipmen affecksi will be reassigned to expanded Atlantic and Pacific training operations which will keep them out of foreign ports 30-DAY TOURS Since the summer of I960, the Army has sent West Point cad els for 30-day duty tours with the U.S. 7th Army in Germany. There, they have served as platoon commanders with regular infantry, artillery and armor uses, the Army said. In place of the trips to Germany, the Army said, the cadets will be sent to Hawaii, Alaska, the Panama Canal Zone and to Army units in the continental United States. Air Force Academy cadets have participated in what was called “byerseas field study” each summer since 1959. means to further their interests in dominating the world" W e It b eoiti|tiiraee IblH (-(Miniry have Ii<^ steadily to a total o Joltosort fo Attend Dedication of Dam resl- JASPKU, Tex. (Al*) dent Johnson Is expected to turn lip Saturday for the dedication of Sam Rayburn Dam, named for the late House speaker, .lobiiHoli was a eh»se tiTeiid and protege of Uaybuin, (Tuemoiilefi Hlartlng at 19 ,'10 a III. will be held at a slle off farm road 2kr» near here. Tjie multlpiirpose dam will Impmmd the largest man made lake in JUNK CARS k WANTED USED AUTO PARTS ^ FOR SALE FE 2-0200 These trips averaged about 2'A weeks and took thie air cadets chiefly to Europe, the Far East and South America. To ^substitute for this, the Air Force is extending what it calls its 3rd lieutenant program, much like the Army’s program in Germany, in which the cadets have been assigned to operational Air Force groups. Woman Gets Surprise; ^ Weight Is 9V2 Stone SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (UPI) When Mrs. Donald Ross stepped gingerly on her new scale during the weekend she got the.sur-prise of her life. She discovered she weighed 9M> stone. Employes of a trading stamp store, where Mrs. Ross obtained the scale, said it obviously was intended for the British market. They exchanged her scale for one calibrated in pounds. A stoneis 14 pounds. New evidence that a form of hardening of the arteries may be caused by the incessant bumping of the blood against blood vessel walls has been reported by medical researchers. (AdvtrtItemenI) "I USED to CRY FOR NO REASON AT ALL” One of the first ebange-oMife danger signals mart mA DlvMon of tho S. S. 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Brake Adjustment • Adjust brake shoes, -test brakes, ln-<,i spect brake lining, inspect hydraulic 8 88 Aulo Seal Belts Metal to metal buckle^-^ a a installation available, each ,, 90^ MOTOR OIL Hi-Grade Motor Oil low ond 30W—Ot. 15' Terry Cloth Soat Covers Washable, cool, good looking terry cloth throw cov--«rs for perfect 088 protection. . GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD " it T\'P’F S39 I*().\'I’IA( I'KKSS. WI':i)\KSI)AN , MAN ,V Cheese, Meat Encase Pickles for Snacks Pinoapplc} Wino Punch Should Mollow low ‘M lioiirii. Add I (I qiiiirt) | liolllc .widfi jtinl 1)0 lore Horviiig Midic'i ;tO u-ognitioir of iill yoinig (x'oplf wild onjoy t-allng pIrkIttH a» miuckH, tlio pickle packeiN hWc devised a ciever new way to serve diil pickles and sweet glierkiiis. Wliole pickles me coinplelely Iddden in a coating ot clieddat clieese, then rolled In chopped IMOiniits and served on a woihI en stick for easy handling and ealing l''oi vailidion, the same melh (xl can he umc al Hoslon (iarden. Waterford, Oxford Win Track Schedule Heavy Ticket Request Heavy for Annual Buick Open (iHAND HLANC i/lT A deluge of advance ticket inquiries in-! dicate an attendance record may be set in the $100,000 eiglitb annual Huick Open golf tourney next ni o n I b, tournament officials said Tuesday. Last year’ll attendance at the Open — 48,695 — is an all-time mark for pro-' fessional golf in Michigan. This year’s tournament will be played June 3-6. Walcrfonl and Walled Lake stepped oiil of llic lnlcr-l,akes b c a g 11 c yesterday lo record track viciorics The Skip|)crs edged (.'ran-brook, 59-50, and Walled Lake sped past Milford, 71-38. Brighton’s victory, in ihe mile relay' gave the Wildcats a 56-53 win over West Bloomfield. and 100 Kullcdgc look both liur Other scluiols joining Ihe Inr.st (lies and McDowell was first in will be AyjyKlalc, Fil/.gcrald, the 110 and Inoad jumj) ^ i,am|)licrc, 't r o y, Norlbvillc, Mike Carrels won the broad i (;ii,rk,ston Fenton, Uoineo, Bad jump, low hurdles and h i g h | K„,j,e.stei jump and ran a leg on the i winning 880 relay team lo | spark Walled Ijike. I Oxiord heal Kellering for the second lime this spring, 70'/i-62, in a triangular that included La-txier with 4W. Tom Hoke, Mark Rutledge and Dick McDowell led Waterford’s triumph. Moke won the shot put Walled ■ Lake and Waterford | are lop contenders for I-L track j 'irm') DrMmT'ioi honors. In a recent edition it (K)''’s( was ciTonesously reported lliat I , ’‘'rjl dual meets count towqrd Ihoi^Miif^ ^ *' 1-L track crown. The champion-! “‘’niQh Huroies - mcgi ship is determined only by the''"jeo’'"’' sw*o''('oc'''pn'r league meet, | “'Rismgor loi, Oxford warmed up for its big j '°Keiiey°'(oi, nu invitational relays tliis Saturday | ‘°Low'Huhnes - Mcor* - I /KM Laniry (0) - Hoard (0), PUT A Tiger in YOUR GARAGE FOR ^65! Don't Just "Roar" by Stop In . , . The Pontiac Retail Store FOR A TIGER OF A DEAL AND THE MOST EXCITING ADVENTURE OF YOUR LIFE ... DO IT TODAY! Top Trade-In ancLQuick Cash for Your Present Car Big Savings > On the Spot Financing Fontloc Retoll Store ’'tits 4)0' ■ Fphti^c Shot Pul- Hoke C While Hie al tendance iigure ^ (lipped below I 0110 lot- Hic HrsI | time ever id Connly Sindinm.i Anron, wiili Iwo liomcrs, and Mallicws, willi one, l)oosk*d; Ihcir record loHil as Icammales I to 749, lour more Hum (lil Hodges and Duke Snider liil while pliiying logcHicr for Hic Brooklyn i-.os Angeles Dodgers. 'I'hc Mathews Aaron run he gan when Hank joined Ihe chit) in 19!)4, one year idler Fddie liiid wliiicked 47 homers in Ills first full seiison. The nuijor k'iigne mark belongs to Yiinkee greats ISiihe Kiilh and Lou Cieh: rig, wtio Iciimed iij) for 870 cir ciiils from 1923 Hiroiigli 1934 Yogi Berra, sliirlmg liis first Njdjonal l,eagu(' game, singled twice iind scored Hie deciding run in the New York Mefs’ 2-1 victory over I’liiladciphia. San Francisco ripiicd Si. Louis 9-2 bcliind Iwo-run liomers by Jesus Alou, Willie Mays and JimJJart. Berra Puls on Glove lo Help Mel Victory NKW YOBK (AIM Yogi Berra ciime hiick Tnesdiiy nighi iind the New York Mel fans loved II Wilh his 40Hi liirlhdny jusi around Hie corner, next Wedne.sday, tlie old l)oy gi iihhcd Hie tuitt and cmiglil the full nine innings in Hu* Mets’ 2-1 victory over Hic Phillies. IlilU'ss in .spring Iriiining and in one pinch hiiting try last Sai-nrday. Yogi came Ihrough wilh two base hits and trundled liornc from second bajic on a liopiior Ihrough Ihe inlicld. TIK BBKAKF-JB Willie Davis' tic-breaking ninlh-inning single (laced the Los Angeles Dwigers to an 8-6 vieloi-y over Cincinnati and Pittsburgli slugged the Chicago Cubs 6-3 as Willie Sta'rgell and Jerry Lynch each homered twice, Aaron’s Hiird and fourth 1965 homers and Mathews’ sixth complonjented Ihe five-hit pitching of Tony Cloningcr at Milwaukee. Cloninger didn’t allow a hit until Joe Morgan doubled with one out in the sixth inning and the Braves in front 7-0. I'lie mall who was Htcd as manager of the New York Yan kces la.sl fall after winning the pennani and losing Ihe World Series in seven games, was Ihe darling of Ihe Mel fans. Tliey looted tlieir liorns, sounded Hieir trumpets and whooped it up for the veteran. Berrn said lie had asked M; IC), Rullodge ,(W). 201. lOO-Hoke (Wl, Randall (C), Longley :c). :I0.9. Low Hurdlea Rutledge (W), (Tie) Jniley (C) and Kline (W), :I4.3. 220- Craig (C), Randall (C), Longley Pole Vault-Cleme.ns IW6), Fergusoi (WB), Slanson (WBl »-6 High , Jump -Mossogrove (B), , Davl and Nicholson (WB) Tied 5-4 Faulkner (Bl, ' Hunt (WB), KaKenback (B) 18ltVi. 880 R^lay—Brighton , Time: 1:43 .... Run—Faleschinl ...... Burke (WB) Time; 5:1.04 High Hurdles-Ha'yne (B), Davis (WB), Nicholson (WB) '■ ) Run—Kovallc (WB), Evanson (B), 12.13 44$ Run—Maltby (B), Campbell (WB). Titser (WB) Time: 55,9 100 Dash—Kozaklewicz (B), Holller (WB), Faulkner (B) Time; 11.2 Low Hurdles-NIcholson (WB), Grob (WB), Davis (WB) Time: 22.5 230 •Run-Kozaklewlcz (B), Bair (B), Clemens (WB) Time: 24.0 Mile Relay-Brighlon . Time: 3:44 The two liomers gave Aaron 370 for his career, tying Hodges lor 12Hi position on the all-time list. Mathews, with 451, is ninth. The Giants chased St. Louis starter Ray Sadecki in the first Inning, with Alou and Mays loading before the left-liander could retire a batter. Juari Mar-ichal, 4-2, checked the Cardinals on six hits, iricluding a homer by Ken Boyer. THIRD HIT Willie Davis’ third hit of Hie game, off Cincinnati reliever Bill McCool in the ninth, followed successive walks to Maury Wills and Wes Parker by starter Joey Jay and gave the Dodgers a 7-6 letfd. John Rose-boro’s sacrifice fly delivered an insurance run. Jim Lefebvre’s eighth-inning homer had pulled LA even. Hull one wilier called a run halted oiil ” With Fd Krancpening bliK-ks Included: Santa Fe, off at 32% on 7,000 shares; Sperry Rand, unchanged at 13V4 un 5,000; and AT & T, up % at 66V4 on 5,000. 1'iie.sday, the Associated Press A.verage of 60 stinks rose 1.8 to 342.0, n new high. Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange Kdt.) m^b ^w L(tl Cb^ I VA 7V4 - 7V< . ____ .. .. .J 52'A 52V4 - Vk 1 K i!! K »7ohn^.4l le’llS'loL 21* Mich Sug...................... Molybdan 10 42W 42V4 ............ 544 74k r/4 rV4 -I- Panctf Pet 5 14k 1W IVk . RIC Group 3.2St 1 ^ 244 „«* • Scurry Rain 5 22W 22Vi 22Vk Sbd W Air -13 10 2?k 10 Signal Oil A la 4 274k tm 274k ^ Sperry R wt 17 54* 544 44* Synta/c Cp .JOa 144 24 ......... Technleol .?5 2 im 21H 2Hk -f ' Un Cantrol .20 14 554% 56% i versharp' 1 T2 38% 28 FeirCam .50e Fairch Hiller Fansfeel Met Fedd Corp 1 FedDStr l.» . FerroCorp 1 FitChrt 1.41t Fllntkote 1 Fla Pow I.2« Fla P LI.40 FoodFalr .20 FMC Cp 1** 18 74% 74 74% + 1 ; 24% 26% 24% 4 Fooie M .20e Ford Mot 3 Forem D .40 Freept S 1.60 ■=rlfo Lay .84 =nrthCp. LSO I 21% 21% 31% Iccept 1.10 sn Clg 1.30 I 31% 21% 31% I 40% 40% 40% — % I 41% 41% 41% - % ....*.........A 4- % 17 83% 83% 83% 4- % 2 52% 52% 58 102 108% 108% 4- % 2 33% 33% ib% 4- % SMi'- I liw I Steel Findings Factual-Abel Won't Commit Union to LBJ Scale on Raise WASHINGTON (AP) -Prtm-klont-olod I. W. Ahol of tbo IJnllfKl Slcelworkera Union mild l(Mlay, "We accept the facts" In a White Iloudb report that the steel Industry con afford a 3 per cent pay raise without Increasing prices. Hut AImiI declined to say whether the union will restrict its demands to the 3 per cent figure recommended by the President's Council of Economic Advisers, 43 3JW 22 39H t 40% -f Olllalls I lOa 12 28 28 28 I) 3<% 34% 34% .U? OranllCS 1.40 GIWSuo 140 Offyhnd .10 Orumn 1„50 ()ult mao 2 it 4 54% 54% 54% 4 % 24 11% .......... I 40% 40% 40% 4- 3 57% 57% 57% ^2 52% 5|Sk 52% -( i I 53% 53% 53% : I 38% 3* 38% -1- % HawPac log Holt Electron HollySug 1.40 Honsesik l.so 14 24% 24% 24% 4 :r l%’:S3 p Cp .25f I 43 43 53% 53M I 44% 44% 44% 4 1 55% 55% 55% InlPapar I.Jo Inl TAT 1.20 ITECktBr .80 I 47% 47% 4>% 4 ' 17 • f 'A 12% -4 % JohnsManv 2 2 41% 41% 41% JonLogan .80, 18 37 34% 37 JonesAL 2.50 xIO 49......... Joy Mtg 2 4 4( _R— 34 34% 34Vi 34% . , 12 33% 33'A 33% 4 % 15 108% 108'A 108% 4 % 4 41% 41% 41% 3 54% 54% 54% . ., 17 54% 54% 54% .. 3 14% 14% 14% 4 V4 KarnCLd 2.40 Kerr Me 1.20 KImbClark 2 KIrkNat .40 Korvatfe Kresga 1.40 /hPorCetr 1 17% 1 I 17% 4 3% V/t 3% 4 LlggaltAM 5 Lionel Corp LIttonIn 1.87t LIvIngsD .741 LockhdAIre 2 -T50 UuckySt 1.20b Lukent StI 2 . . j 30% 30% - % 8 52% 59% 59% ... 1 13% 13% 13% ... 17 13% 83% 83% 4 % 1 4% 4% ....... 87 20% 82% 47 2% 2% 30 44% 44 2 20 20 13 20 20 5 27% 27% 11 34% 34% MadFd'i*.^ Mad Sq Gar lagmaC 1.40 ..lagnavox 1 Marathon 2 ;TrM'ar’*f ...jyDStr 1.50 McCall .40b McOonAIr .40 McKass 1.70 MeadCp 1.70 12 34% 34% 34% - MlnerChem 1 MInnMM 1.10 Mohasco .70 I 43Vi 43% 4 % 1 27% 27% 4 'A / 81% 81% 4 % « 23% 23% 4 % N EmEI 1 NYCenf 1.30a NlagM Pw 2 NIagMPw wl NorfbIkW 4a NA Avia 2.80 NorNatGas 2 NSta Pw 1.44 Northrop 1 S 44% 44% 44% - V stAIrl .80 8 84% ( Occident .25d OlInMath 1.40 gllsElev 1.20 utb Mar .40 Owenslll 2.70 14 14 1 14 114% 11 2 58% 3 14 44% 4 Pac 0 E : Petrol PacTAT 1.2(1 Pan Am .40 Panh EP 2.40 Panh EPL wl ’ ParamPIct 2 ParkaDav la Peab Coal 1 Penn Dixie 1 Penney l.50a PePwLt 'l la I 38% 38% - lA 27 47% 47% 47% 4 'A Pblla El 1.48 Phil Rdg 3.20 PhllMor 3.40 PhllllpsPet 2 Pitney 6... . PItPlate 2.40 Pit Steel Polaroid .10 ProctAG 1,85 Pubikind .341 ’ullman 2a PureOII 1.40 2 14 32 «% RCA .40a RalsIonPur 1 tayette. .48 11 58% i8'A 58% 4 —R— 401 35% 35% 35% 4 9 32% 32'A 32% . tayonler 1. taytheon . Reading C< RelchCh .2 I ,12% - RepubSteel 2 Revlon 1.30 • RoxallDr ,30b Reyn Met .40 ‘’.heemMfg 1 :lchfOll 1.80 4 16% 14% 14% 8 44% 44% 44% — %- 34 45% 45% 45% 4 % 8 34 34 34 4 'A 28 43% 43% 43% - Vk XS 24% 24% 24% 4 % I 40% 40% 40% ...... "Tijal's a question we are going to be talking about after we resume negollallons,’ 'Abel .said 111 nn Interview on NlUrs "Today” show. Refore negotiating a foUr-month [Kistponcnicnt of lost Saturday’s .strike deadline, the union had insisted on a pay raise of 3.2 per cent which the council previously had recommended as the guideline for nonlnflation-ary pay raises In U.S. industry as a whole. In the pnK'oss, he's made two hotels first the Reverly Hills and now the Beverly Wllshire havens for such varied guesis as Elizabeth Taylor and corporation presidents. He's made the hotels a social hub of Heverly Hills and surrounding Ij)s Angeles flirougli a liard-driving .skill befitting a jformer Bank of America vice 'Wesldenl and a descendant of Mexico’s Spanish conqueror Hernando Cortez. 14% 14% 4 ' Saaburg .40 l!,c“ony-2.-0 JoulhnCo 1,80 South Ry 2.80 Sparry Rand Splagal 1.50 Aid Xolltman StOllind' LwS St ONJ I.Mg StdOllOh 1.A i 57% 3 r36 55% 3 17 ( 10 76 ^ ^ n] 67% 62% ( 12 31% 31% : 3 54H S4H —T— » 20% 30% 20% 12 106'/^ l07’/t 108% t Trahtam .80b Trahaltron TrI Cont .37g Twaqt C .40b 24—1 I xrw 42% 42% .... —w— WarnPIct .50 8 14% 14% 14% - 1 WamLam .20 4 38 37% 37% — WnAIrLIn .80 5 32% 32% 32% . WnBanc 1.10 2 37 34% 37 4 1 WUntel 1.40 35 45% 45% 45% 4 1 WestgEI 1.20 x37 50% 50% 50% Wh rpool 2.40 42 82% 82Vk 82% 4 WhIteM 1.40 3 33% 33% 33% W'lxw, Co 2 10 50% 50% 50% 4 1 WInnDIx 1.20 4 40 40 40 Woolworih 1 17 30 30 30 Worthing 1.50 7 42 42 42 4 1 _x—Y—Z— Xerox Cp ,50 12 117% 137% 137JA 41 YngjtSht 1.80 7 45>A 45'A 4S'A Zenith 1.40 21 81 82% S3 4 V Salas tlguras art unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates of divl-ends In the toregolng table are annuel disbursements tased on the last quarterly — --ml-annual daclaratlon. Special or dividends or payments not designs regular ara Idahtifled In the ng footnotes. Iso extra or extras, b—Annual ilus stock dividend, c—Liquidating Id. d-peclarad or paid In 1245 plus stock dividend. a-Pald last year, t—Payable In stock during 1245, estimated cash value on ex-dIvIdend or ax-dlstrlbu-“ ■ 1. g—Declared or paid so tar this year, h—Declared or paid attar stock — — —— - ■- .Daclarad or p«" split up. ____________ . year, an accumulative Issue .................. p-Pald **• dends In arrear.. k—■ * omined, deterred or no actroii'takeh St dividend meeting... r—Declared or paid In 1244 plus stock dividend. - f—Paid In stock during 1244, estimated cash ex-dIvIdend or ax-dlstrlbutlon flon. ■-Ex I md. y-Bx DM 31s—Ex dlstrlbu-i-WIthout war-. wd—When dls-I. nd—Next day ww-WIth war ____Jd. wl—When I delivery. v|-ln bankruptcy or recaLversbJp ...OX,,, being reorganized under the Bankruptcy *— — securities assumed by ——---------- ------ ----- subi t equalization tax. Noon Tue’s. 83.S: 102.0 88.4 Prev. Day 83.5 102.0 B8.4 week Ago B3.S 102.1 88.4 Month Ago 83 5 101.7 88.4 Year Ago 81.1 100.2 87,4 82.2 101.0 88.3 Net change .....41.0 Noon Tues. . Prev. Day . ^0-: i-.i 27.2 171.3 174.4 .94.2 171.2 174.4 423.4 171.2 175.4 . 472.4 172.2 173.8 .438.8 144.3 151.7 . 496.2 177.8 1 77.3 . 442.8 142.3 147.2 ............I 147.2 STICKING TO DEMAND Aftel said the union is also still slicking with its demand for ii cost of living adjustment in addition to an over - all pay raise. “We're Interested in both," said Abel, who Is scheduled to succeed David J. McDonald on June 1. McDonald is contesting the union election result. The union’s original demand for a pay hike of 3.2 per cent would afhount to about 14 cents per hour on top of present wages and fringe benefits totalling an estimated $4.40 per hour. A 3 per cent hike, as suggested by the Council of Economic Advisers, would be slightly more than 13 cents. The union's cost of living demands would bring the total to 17 or 18 cents per hour. NOT PATTERN The steel industry granted an 11.5-cent hike to apply during the four-month strike postponement, but said this did not necessarily set the pattern for, the eventual final settlement. The money is to be set aside and the men do not actually get it until after the final settlement. The 11.5-cent figure amounts to about a 2.7 per cent increase. The industry contends that productivity per man hour In the steel mills has averaged only about 2 per cent in recent years, compart with the council’s estimate of 3.2 per cent for Industry generally. Early Grain Prices Narrowly Mixed CHICAGO (AP) - Grain futures prices were mostly narrowly mixed in early transactions today although Soybeans showed a continued firmer trend. Trade had become slow near the end of the first hour with soybeans % to 1% cents a bushel higher. May $2.89; wheat % lower to Ml higher, May I1.43V8; corn unchanged to % higher. May $1.33%; oats unchanged to % lower, May 71V* cents; rye unchanged to % lower, May $1.17y4bid. • Toasters Meet at U-M ANN ARBOR (AP)-Some 2CiO persons are expected to attend the annual district convention of Toasters International at the. University of Michigan Satur-day. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-The CMh position of th» Tr»»tury comparod with corresponding date a year ago: April 22, 1245 April 22, "■* Balance— » e,20l,437,245.in $ 5,585,235.435.11 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1-.* 49.017.7« 417 a* 4, BA, 4 Low ........... 404.4 J50.7 148.9 ! DO^-JONBS NOON AVERAGES IS Utils '• Stocks....... 225.02-1-2.21 ..... 213.01-1-0.34 ..... 142.2S-kO.44 ..... 321.2S-kO.87 d grade rail e Otllltlis . .; W.20+0.«5 ... 84.83-k0.03 .. . 2«32-f0.12 I Mscei rear juiy i— 25,217,753,813.28 24,804,202,424.30 awals Fiscal Yaar— -102,889,252,322.29 103,841,223,782.27 318484,272,345.15 302,49t741,2».44 issart— 14,411,487,342.14 15,443,011,203.57 (X) - Includtt 8284,114,247.26 debt not lubject to statutory limit. INCREASED Gray Drug Strs .25 . 4-11 7-1 . . REGULAR Doke Power ...25 Q 5-25 4-28 Bucking Trend Hofelman a Success By DORIS KLEIN BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - Hernando William De Vos Courtriglit, (his town's luxury Innkeeper, Is bucking n Rend In U.,S. hotel nperiitlniin - and making n success of It. While/many famous old hotels are l>eiiig absorbed by large chain operations, Courtriglit bps twice (lemonslrutcd how to remain Independent. CARRIAGE TRADE We Hacriflce conventions for the carriage triKfe,” Is how (.'mirlright puts It. 'Personalize service - our guests have the money to pay for it — and to expect It." > * * A world traveler and renowned gourmet, Courtrighl’s e and photograph appear a.s often in the society columns ns do those of his noted guests. The Chevaliers du Tastevln, one of the numerous gourmet socletle.s to which he belongs, rneet.s regularly at the Beverly Wllshire. Among the members: Art Linkictter and Walt Disney. NOTED PEOPI,E "When people read about other noted people having their social events at the hotel, they want to come there, too,” s^iys an aide. Courtright drew the carriage trade away from the Beverly Wllshire when he look over the By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I have a fairly good, steady job and $4,000 to invest. My wife is a slide woman who needs medical attention and I can take care of this now. I would like to Invest for the future, when my earning power will be less.” D.D. A) If I were in your position — and had an emergency cash reserve in addition to the $4,000 you mention — 1 would buy two good stocks with established growth records and very moderate dividends. In this category, I like Gen-i eral Telephone & Electronics. This is the largest of the independent telephone systems and controls a major manufacturing complex as well. Sears, Roebuck has been establishing a fine earnings pattern, is active in insurance and may soon be In mutual fund sales. I strongly recommend its purchase as your second selection. Q) “I own both series E and H bonds. I also receive Social Security each month. In view of so much government deficit .spending and the possible removal of the gold base, I would Hke^ to know If it would be advisable for me to cash my bonds, while the government is still in a position to pay off, and buy land.” t.h. ' A) If the time ever,comes when the government defaults on its obligations. I’m afraid any land you bought would have little value. I know that there are many conservative people like yourself who are concerned about our federal deficits. There are obvifiusly an even gre number who are not in the least concerned, andjhis includes our top government officials. Please remember that the Federal taxing power is so great that any default on the debt is inconceivable. Please don’t unload your strong Governments on a misconception. Sell only if you know land, want land, and the moderate inflation hedge which it provides. To order your copy of Roger Spear’s new 48-page Guide to Successful Investing, clip this notice and send $1.00 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of this newspaper. Box 1618, Grand Central Station, New York, New York City, N.Y7 10017. (Copyright, 1965) Hcv(!rly HHIh in 19.34. He's brought much of It back since he took over the Beverly Wllshire In October 1961, Tlie Beverly Wllshfre was trailing the average l4>s Angeles hotel oeeiipmicy rule by 5 |)er cent when he took over; now It’s 10 per cent ahead. 11ie banquet and hOr and restaurant busine.ss have doubled. A $6-mlllloii, 250 room expansion Is |)laii(ied for the fall at the irly Wllshire. He put through a similar expansion at tlie Beverly llill.s during his row . %99 ^ 48"x45“ Aniiiversarv Sale Priced Choose from the one illu?lrated and two other excitingly beautiful patterns, ma^ifi-cent in design and color. Shop now while stocks are complete. lYMH SINGLE 1 One and One-Half DOUBLE TRIPl.E 48" 72" 96" 144" ‘ 11 •Reg. Sale Res. Sale.4. Reg. 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